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Landmarks of Liberty 

THE GROWTH OF AMERICAN POLITICAL 

IDEALS AS RECORDED IN SPEECHES 

FROM 

OTIS TO WILSON 



EDITED WITH 
INTRODUCTION AND NOTES 

BY 

ROBERT P. ST. JOHN 

AND 

RAYMOND L. NOON AN 



NEW YORK 

HARCOURT, BRACE AND HOWE 
1920 



i&\\ 

%> 



COPYRIGHT, I920, BY 
HARCOURT, BRACE AND HOWE, INC. 



MAR -8 1920 



©CI.A559955 



PREFACE 

The editors of this book have jxied to gather in a 
single volume as many as possible of the great speeches 
that have had an important influence on the growth 
of American political ideals. H^d the limits of their 
volume permitted, they would have begun with Crom- 
well and would have traced the growth of our institu- 
tions from their English sources. As it is they have 
begun with the first evidence of alienation from the 
Mother Country and have followed the story to the 
close of the Great War. Speeches of much historical 
importance, such as those that discussed the adoption 
of the Constitution, have necessarily been omitted. 
The speeches here included, however, it is believed 
constitute a series sufficiently complete to give stu- 
dents a more intimate knowledge of our national 
life and a new appreciation of the sacrifice and labor 
that produced the American political fabric. 

Many teachers maintain that the reading of speeches 
in a collection can be made more valuable than the 
prolonged study of one or two orations. A sufficiently 
large number of selections, they say, permits the in- 
structor to make use of comparative methods of study 
that are both stimulating and interesting. As pupils 
read the speeches, the teacher can emphasize, as the 
welface of the class seems to demand, historical 
significance, the ideals of good citizenship, oral ex- 
pression, rhetorical structure, or the principles of 
argument and persuasion. It is not unlikely, more- 
over, that this volume can be used with profit even 



iv PREFACE 

by those instructors who prefer to have pupils engage 
in the detailed study of one or two great speeches 
rather than undertake a course in comparative read- 
ing, for the volume contains material sufficiently 
diverse to satisfy every taste. 

The editors wish to acknowledge with thanks the 
permission of President Wilson, Theodore Roosevelt, 
and Otto H. Kahn to print speeches included in this 
book. The Call to Arms, by H. H. Asquith, was in- 
cluded through permission obtained from The Current 
History Magazine, published by the New York Times 
Company. The editors are also indebted to the New 
York Times Company for permission to print Premier 
Lloyd George's speech on America's Entrance into the 
War. 

October i, 191 9. 



CONTENTS 

PAGE 

Introduction vii 

James Otis Writs of Assistance 3 

February, 1761 

William Pitt, Earl of Chatham.. American Taxation 11 
January 14, 1766 

John Wilkes War with America 19 

February 6, 1775 

Edmund Burke Conciliation with 

America 25 

March 22, 1775 

Patrick Henry Liberty or Death . . 54 

March 23, 1775 

Daniel Webster First Bunker Hill 

Address 60 

June 17, 1825 

Daniel Webster Reply to Hayne ... 77 

January 26, 1830 

Abraham Lincoln Address at Cooper 

Institute 87 

February 27, i860 

Edward D. Baker ) n , , , 7 ,„ 

John- C. Breckenridge f Dehatc on thc U ar I04 

August 1, 1861 

John Bright The Trent Affair. . 113 

December 4, 1861 

Henry Ward Beecher Speech at Liverpool 122 

October 16, 1863 

v 



vi CONTENTS 

PAGE 

Abraham Lincoln The Speech at Get- 
tysburg 134 

November 19, 1863 

Abraham Lincoln The Second In- 
augural 137 

March 4, 1865 

Henry W. Grady The New South ... 141 

December 12, 1886 

Theodore Roosevelt The Strenuous Life 148 

April 10, 1899 

H. H. Asquith Tae Call to Arms. . 160 

September 5, 1914 

Woodrow Wilson Message to Con- 
gress 174 

April 2, 1917 

David Lloyd George The Meaning of 

Am-erica's E n - 
trance into the 

War 189 

April 12, 1917 

Woodrow Wilson Flag Day Speech. . 197 

June 14, 1917 

Otto H. Kahn Prussianized Ger- 
many 207 

September 26, 191 7 

Woodrow Wilson Message to Con- 
gress 215 

December 4, 1917 

Woodrow Wilson Address at Balti- 
more 218 

April 6, 1918 

Lives and Notes 237 



INTRODUCTION 

The war with Germany has brought to the minds of 
the people a new interest in the problems of our na- 
tional life and a deeper understanding of the meaning 
and aims of democracy. A widespread desire to 
stimulate intelligent patriotism through exposition of 
our national ideals and study of the world's progress 
toward popular government is everywhere manifesting 
itself. As the time is opportune for this movement 
all good citizens should do their utmost to encourage 
it. In the past soap-box orators, dreamy-eyed pacifists, 
and unpatriotic teachers of the type of the Russian 
internationalists have insidiously attacked and under- 
mined the patriotism of our citizens both young and 
old. The time has come to end such propaganda. 
Our new citizens must learn that it was not unoccu- 
pied land nor the Indians that made America a free 
country. How painfully the human race has won the 
liberty under which we live ; what it cost in money, 
endeavor, and blood, it is the manifest duty of live 
men now to teach everywhere. 

In schools and colleges instruction in patriotism 
can well be based on a study of the great speeches 
which step by step mark the world's progress toward 
democracy. Here we find literature and history com- 
bined. Here the many facts and truths of history are 
not only still lighted with the spirit of the past but 
they are also clothed with the language of art. Just 
as battles record for the student of military science the 
crises and conclusions of physical struggles for the 



viii INTRODUCTION 

world's freedom, so great speeches mark for the 
statesman and thinker the triumphs of mind and spirit 
in their struggles with the foes of progress. 

For the use of young and imaginative students the 
best record of history is found in the speeches that 
helped make it. Unfortunately the record is incom- 
plete. But where speeches exist marking the crises 
through which the world has passed in its progress 
towards popular government, they should be carefully 
preserved and studied because of their power to re- 
create the past. Speeches give more than conclusions. 
They state the problem and suggest a solution which 
for the time being is wavering in the balance. As the 
student reads the words of the orator, he is able to 
enter personally into the struggle. He weighs the 
interests that are at stake and trembles for the re- 
sult. As he reads speech after speech he discovers 
that liberty is not a matter of course, but has been 
wrung from enemies bit by bit through blood and 
sweat. Through the words of the orator he learns 
to value the inheritance handed down to him from 
the past and gains a personal appreciation of the serv- 
ices of those master minds whose heroic struggles 
have helped to make the world safe for him. 

Speeches are real and intense dramas of life and 
history. The orator often faces opposition as relent- 
less as a play hero is supposed to meet in his make- 
believe world. When a great orator prepares to 
speak, he takes into consideration all the elements of 
his audience and the occasion. He plans by making 
use of every resource in his power to meet the forces 
of evil as they assail him, step by step. He may fail ; 
but if his cause is essential to the progress of liberty 
and democracy, the contest is not lost. Another hero 
takes up the struggle and sooner or later wins ; for 



INTRODUCTION ix 

civilization is ever moving toward something better 
and will continue to do so irresistibly. The best 
record of many of the most important events in his- 
tory is found in the word's great speeches and their 
dramatic environment. 

The chief characteristic of speeches, as compared 
with other forms of literature or other documents 
that record history, is that the end and aim of speeches 
is action. Founded on the past, they look always into 
the future. The giving of information, the gratifica- 
tion of artistic desire, inspiration itself, are of minor 
importance in oratory unless they influence conduct. 
It is the duty of the orator, in the face of opposition, 
to induce men to adopt a new course of action. This 
is true even on those occasions when the rights and 
liberties of men are apparently not at stake. Con- 
servatism, sloth, and greed are often as hard to com- 
bat as visible enemies. Webster found it quite as diffi- 
cult to induce his fellow-citizens to emulate in their 
daily lives the deeds of the men who fought at Bunker 
Hill, as he did to vanquish Hayne and his associates 
in Congress when they threatened to overthrow the 
Union. Beecher's most difficult task at Liverpool was 
not to control his visible opponents who sought to 
break up the meeting, but to induce his hearers to 
forego their own personal profit for the sake of 
moral ideals. The purpose of every orator is to in- 
duce men, in spite of opposition visible or invisible, 
to enter upon a new course of action. The essential 
characteristic of oratory is persuasion. 

The speeches contained in this volume clearly illus- 
trate the fact that persuasion is the end and aim of 
oratory. These speeches helped to make the world safe 
for democracy, not through arguments that convinced 
the intellect, but through persuasive appeals that led 



x INTRODUCTION 

to action. The skill with which an orator adapts 
his methods of appeal to his audience determines the 
force of his oratory. As a means of persuasion, argu- 
ment is to be reckoned with tone, with gesture, with 
allusion, and with all the various forms of connota- 
tion. It may be chief among these; but if it stands 
alone and is not emotionally persuasive ; it is dead. A 
brilliant speaker may win our intellectual assent for 
each idea he advances, we may perceive the desirabil- 
ity of every reform he advocates, and yet we may not 
be moved to initiate one reform or to correct one 
existing abuse. Through argument an orator may win 
the consent of the intellect; he can never subdue the 
will or lead to action until he appeals to the emotions. 

The significance of this fact is neglected in schools 
and colleges, although it is duly appreciated in business 
and in the world generally. The salesman and the 
advertiser attempt to subdue the will without being 
controversial. The business man is suspicious of argu- 
ment, but he is the friend of persuasion. Teachers, 
on the other hand, have almost crowded persuasion 
from the rhetorics and the schools. As an aspect of 
discourse^ it has received unmerited neglect, and argu- 
ment has been unduly stressed. 

In the study of Burke, for example, we have for 
years made exhaustive analyses of his argument. We 
have followed the course of his logic to the smallest 
capillary of evidence. At this moment the argumentive 
skeleton of his discourse is carefully housed in many 
a teacher's closet. Such a study may not have been 
unprofitable, but it is better and more interesting to 
place the emphasis of our work in stating the persua- 
sive problem that Burke faced, in observing the degree 
of skill that he used in attempting a solution, in noting 
the changes in conduct that he brought about, and 



INTRODUCTION xi 

in pointing out the help that he gave in the world's 
struggle for democracy. 

The teacher who uses this volume, therefore, 
should try to lay before his pupils whatever is neces- 
sary to a dramatic conception of the occasion. The 
famous words should again be illumined with life 
and reality. He should attempt to recreate the situa- 
tion that called forth the speech and make his pupils 
clearly understand the problem that was before the 
orator when he rose to speak. The exact nature and 
force of the opposition, and whatever defines the audi- 
ence and gives it its character and sympathies, should 
also be clear. With this data at his disposal, the stu- 
dent will be in a position both to appreciate the orator's 
skill in adapting his appeal to the prejudices and mo- 
tives of his hearers and to understand his place in 
history. 

In order that the final appreciation of the student 
may approach as nearly as possible to that of an intel- 
ligent member of the audience that listened to the 
message of the orator when it was first spoken, the 
teacher should use each speech as a basis for exercises 
in oral English. Through oral reading or declamation 
the class should discover that an oration cannot make 
its complete appeal as written literature. No small 
part of the orator's message is transmitted through his 
voice and presence. 

The supreme object of the study of these speeches, 
we must remember, is not mere increased facility in 
English, important as that is, but fuller appreciation 
of the worth of democracy and deeper devotion to the 
duties of citizenship. Students who learn the signifi- 
cance in history of each of the great men whose words 
appear in this book, ought not to be satisfied with an 
intellectual assimilation of our national ideals or with 



xii INTRODUCTION 

a passive pride in our country's achievements. The 
persuasive utterances that in the past induced men to 
struggle for liberty and democracy, should in the 
hands of loyal and enthusiastic teachers be able to 
inspire students with patriotism of a dynamic type. 
Pupils should learn from these speeches that govern- 
ments that are democratic require from their citizens 
more than passive loyalty. Since the modern state is 
the people, the effective force of the state can be no 
greater than the sum of the public activity of its citi- 
zens. The final result of the study of the dramatic 
struggles recorded in this book, therefore, should be 
the conclusion on the part of pupils, that active co- 
operation in public affairs, is the best evidence of ap- 
preciation of the inheritance that has come down to us 
from the conflicts and heroism of other days. 



LANDMARKS OF LIBERTY 



" Let your imagination range down the old famous roads of 
freedom. Powers of moral quickening come from communion 
with ancient heroism. I take delight in the Old Testament story 
which tells of a dead man being let down into the sepulchre of 
the prophet Elisha. * And when he touched the bones of Elisha 
the man revived and stood upon his feet.' Whatever we may 
think of that story it is pregnant with moral and spiritual sig- 
nificance. It proclaims the vitalizing energies of the great and 
noble dead. We touch our heroic ancestry and invigorating 
virtue flows out of them And so, in these tremendous days of 
anxious and protracted conflict, let us let ourselves down into 
the sacred sepulchres of history, and seek communion with the 
honored dead. Let us touch the bones of Lincoln if perchance 
we may be revived and stand upon our feet. Let our minds and 
hearts sink down into his letters and speeches so that his vision 
may inspire our imaginations and his motives fortify our souls. 
And let us touch the bones of Oliver Cromwell, for he being 
dead yet speaketh, and his words are spirit and life. Let us 
seek inspiration at great historic fonts. Seeing that we are com- 
passed about by so great a cloud of witnesses, the faithful 
knightly warriors of other days, let us nerve our hearts in their 
heroisms, let us feed our wills on their exploits, and then with 
their virtuous blood running in our own veins, let us bravely 
turn to face the task and the menace of our own day." 

John Henry Jowett 



WRITS OF ASSISTANCE 

February, 1761 

America was settled largely by people who left their 
native lands in order to secure a greater degree of re- 
ligious and political liberty. In the New World, sepa- 
rated by three thousand miles from the autocratic 
governments of Europe, they naturally found little 
reason to relinquish this love of freedom. In the 
leisure hours of the long winters many read the writ- 
ings of Locke, Rousseau, and other authors who have 
set forth the ideals of democracy. Accordingly there 
gradually grew up in America, in addition to the com- 
mon desire for practical political liberty, a widespread 
interest in the abstract theory of rights and govern- 
ment. 

Under these circumstances it is natural that the 
thirteen colonies under British rule resented fiercely 
any interference with their personal rights. Especially 
after the French and Indian War the colonists were 
not only alert to criticize any act of Parliament that 
promised to imperil the liberty under which they had 
lived, but they also sought by such means as were 
within their power to obtain for the colonial assem- 
blies new concessions and grants. At first they were 
content to build up their rights within the English 
Constitution and they had no thought of separation 
from the Mother Country. As late as the end of 1774 
the Continental Congress in a petition to the King ex- 
pressed its desire to conform in all respects to the 

3 



4 WRITS OF ASSISTANCE 

British Constitution. The colonial troops carried the 
King's colors as their flag until 1777. Indeed it is 
said that until near the close of the Revolution inde- 
pendence was advocated only by an aggressive 
minority. 

James Otis's speech against the use of writs of as- 
sistance, in Boston, in 1761, marks the beginning of 
the struggle in which as yet the colonists sought 
merely the rights of Englishmen. The dispute with 
England originated in an attempt to regulate American 
commerce. The Navigation Acts of the British Parlia- 
ment had required Americans to trade with the Eng- 
lish only, and consequently to import only goods which 
paid a duty to the Mother Country. Both to avoid the 
expense of these duties and as a protest against the 
injustice of the trade laws the colonists had en- 
couraged smuggling and had carried on an illicit trade 
with the Dutch. Not half the goods imported into 
America paid the duty. It cost the British government 
$35,000 to collect a revenue of $7,500. John Adams 
estimated that the loss of revenue by smuggling on 
molasses alone was $125,000 a year. 

In 1 761, in the hope of obtaining evidence that 
would convict the smugglers, the British government 
invoked writs of assistance. These writs had previ- 
ously been used for other purposes in both England 
and America but had fallen into disuse. They were 
general warrants that in spite of the common law pro- 
tecting the privacy of a man's home, authorized cus- 
toms agents to make "diligent and complete " search 
of the property of suspected persons. 

The advocate general at this time whose duty it 
was as the representative of the British Crown to sup- 
port the writs of assistance was James Otis. He was 
not only a lawyer of great ability, but he was a man 



WRITS OF ASSISTANCE 5 

of lofty principle and was a commanding figure among 
the colonists. That he might be free to oppose the 
dangerous and detested writs, he resigned his office. 
In their favor, however, his successor, Jeremy Gridley, 
presented an argument to a court who sat under Gov- 
ernor Hutchinson in the council chamber of the old 
Town House, Boston. About the massive table were 
ranged the five judges, clad in their rich robes of 
scarlet English broadcloth and wearing their large 
cambric bands and immense judicial wigs. Behind 
them were full length portraits of Charles II and James 
II arrayed in royal splendor. After Gridley had 
spoken, Oxenbridge Thatcher gave the argument for 
the people. Then Otis, the former officer of the 
Crown, arose to support Thatcher. The words of 
Adams gave most adequately the effect of his speech : 

" Otis was a flame of fire ! With a promptitude of 
classical allusions, a depth of research, a rapid sum- 
mary of historical events and dates, a profusion of 
legal authorities, a prophetic glance of his eye into 
futurity, and a torrent of impetuous eloquence, he hur- 
ried away everything before him. American inde- 
pendence was then and there born ; the seeds of patriots 
and heroes was then and there sown. Every man of 
a crowded audience appeared to go away, as I did, 
ready to take up arms against the writs of assistance. 
Then and there was the first scene of the first act of 
opposition to the arbitrary claims of Great Britain." 

At the conclusion of his speech Otis immediately 
found himself the leader of public thought in New 
England and the champion of constitutional rights in 
the colonies. 



6 JAMES OTIS 

WRITS OF ASSISTANCE 

James Otis 

May it please your honors, I was desired by one of the 
court to look into the books, and consider the question 
now before them concerning writs of assistance. I have, 
accordingly, considered it, and now appear not only in 
obedience to your order, but likewise in behalf of the 
inhabitants of this town, who have presented another 
petition, and out of regard to the liberties of the subject. 
And I take this opportunity to declare that, whether 
under a fee or not (for in such a cause as this I despise a 
fee), I will to my dying day oppose with all the powers 
and faculties God has given me all such instruments of 
slavery on the one hand, and villainy on the other, as 
this writ of assistance is. 

It appears to me the worst instrument of arbitrary 
power, the most destructive of English liberty and the 
fundamental principles of law, that was ever found in 
an English law book. I must, therefore, beg your 
honors' patience and attention to the whole range of 
argument 1 that may, perhaps, appear uncommon in many 
things, as well as the points of learning that are more 
remote and unusual; that the whole tendency of my de- 
sign may the more easily be perceived, the conclusions 
better descend, and the force of them be better felt. 

I shall not think much of my pains in this cause, as I 
engaged in it from principle. 2 I was solicited to argue 
this cause as advocate-general; and because I would not, 
I have been charged with desertion from my office. To 
this charge I can give a very sufficient answer. I re- 
nounced that office, and I argue this cause from the same 
principle; and I argue it with the greater pleasure, as 



WRITS OF ASSISTANCE 7 

it is in favor of British liberty, at the time when we 
hear the greatest monarch upon earth declaring from his 
throne that he glories in the name of Briton, and that the 
privileges of his people are dearer to him than the most 
valuable prerogatives of his crown ; and as it is in oppo- 
sition to a kind of power, the exercise of which, in former 
periods of history, cost one king of England his head 3 
and another his throne. I have taken more pains in this 
cause than I ever will take again, although my engaging 
in this and another popular cause has raised much resent- 
ment. But I think that I can sincerely declare that I 
cheerfully submit myself to every odious name for con- 
science's sake ; and from my soul I despise all those whose 
guilt, malice, or folly has made them my foes. Let the 
consequences be what they will, I am determined to 
proceed. The only principles of public conduct that are 
worthy of a gentleman or a man are to sacrifice estate, 
ease, health, and applause, and even life, to the sacred 
calls of his country. 

These manly sentiments, in private life, make the 
good citizen ; in public life, the patriot and the hero. I 
do not say that when brought to the test I shall be in- 
vincible. I pray God I may never be brought to the 
melancholy trial ; but if I ever should, it will be then 
known how far I can reduce to practice principles which 
I know to be founded in truth. In the meantime I will 
proceed to the subject of this writ. 

Your honors will find in the old books concerning the 
office of a justice of the peace precedents of general war- 
rants to search suspected houses. But in more modern 
books you will find only special warrants to search such 
and such houses, specially named, in which the com- 
plainant has before sworn that he suspects his goods are 
concealed; and will find it adjudged that special warrants 
only are legal. In the same manner I rely on it, that the 



8 JAMES OTIS 

writ prayed for in this petition, being general, is illegal. 
It is a power that places the liberty of every man in the 
hands of every petty officer. I say that I admit that 
special writs of assistance to search special places, may 
be granted to certain persons on oath; but I deny that 
the writ now prayed for can be granted, for I beg leave to 
make some observations on the writ itself before I pro- 
ceed to other acts of Parliament. 

In the first place, the writ is universal, being directed 
" to all and singular justices, sheriffs, constables, and all 
other officers and subjects;" so that, in short, it is directed 
to every subject in the king's dominions. Every one with 
this writ may be a tyrant; if this commission is legal, a 
tyrant in a legal manner, also, may control, imprison, or 
murder any one within the realm. 

In the next place, it is perpetual; there is no return. 
A man is accountable to no person for his doings. Every 
man may reign secure in his petty tyranny, and spread 
terror and desolation around him, until the trump of 
the archangel shall excite different emotions in his soul. 

In the third place, a person with this writ, in the day- 
time may enter all houses, shops, etc., at will, and com- 
mand all to assist him. 

Fourthly, by this writ, not only deputies, etc., but even 
their menial servants, are allowed to lord it over us. 
What is this but to have the curse of Canaan 4 with a 
witness on us; to be the servant of servants, the most 
despicable of God's creation? 

Now one of the most essential branches of English lib- 
erty is the freedom of one's house. A man's house is his 
castle; and while he is quiet, he is as well guarded as a 
prince in his castle. This writ, if it should be declared 
legal, would totally annihilate this privilege. Custom- 
house officers may enter our houses when they please; 
we are commanded to permit their entry. Their menial 



WRITS OF ASSISTANCE 9 

servants may enter, may break locks, bars, and everything 
in their way; and whether they break through malice or 
revenge, no man, no court can inquire. Bare suspicion 
without oath is sufficient. This wanton exercise of this 
power is not a chimerical suggestion of a heated brain. 

I will mention some facts. Mr. Pew had one of these 
writs, and when Mr. Ware succeeded him, he endorsed 
this writ over to Mr. Ware; so that these writs are nego- 
tiable from one officer to another, and so your honors 
have no opportunity of judging the persons to whom this 
vast power is delegated. Another instance is this: Mr. 
Justice Walley had called this same Mr. Ware before 
him, by a constable, to answ r er for a breach of the Sab- 
bath Day Acts, or that of profane swearing. As soon as 
he had finished, Mr. Ware asked him if he had done. He 
replied: " Yes." " Well, then," said Mr. Ware, " I will 
show you a little of my power. I command you to permit 
me to search your house for uncustomed goods;" and 
went on to search the house from the garret to the cellar, 
and then served the constable in the same manner! But 
to show another absurdity in this writ, if it should be 
established, I insist upon it that every person, by the 14th 
of Charles II, 5 has this power as well as the custom-house 
officers. The words are: "It shall be lawful for any 
person or persons authorized," etc. What a scene does 
this open! Every man prompted by revenge, ill humor, 
or wantonness, to inspect the inside of his neighbor's 
house, may get a writ of assistance. Others will ask if 
from self-defense; one arbitrary exertion will provoke an- 
other, until society be involved in tumult and in blood. 6 

In a brief statement tell how British liberty, according to Otis, 
was threatened by the use of writs of assistance. 

Discuss the principle " A man's house is his castle." Has it 
any recognition in modern law? 

Was Otis's opposition to writs of assistance based chiefly on 
financial, constitutional, moral, religious, or other reasons? 



io JAMES OTIS 

Do you think that Otis was unnecessarily alarmed? 

Do you think that Otis was considered disloyal by most Eng- 
lishmen of his time who were familiar with his speech? 

Do you think that Otis himself believed that he was acting 
the part of a loyal British subject when he delivered this speech? 

Do you think that in 1761 Otis seriously considered American 
independence as a means of combating injustice such as re- 
sulted from the British use of writs of assistance? 

How did Otis come to occupy so prominent a place in the 
history of American independence? 

Discuss the persuasive value of Otis's detailed account of the 
operation of the writs. 



AMERICAN TAXATION 

January 14, 1766 

The fact that the British government had found it 
difficult to collect revenue from the colonies even 
though writs of assistance were used did not deter 
George III and his ministers from continuing to at- 
tempt to obtain money from America. Increased taxes 
on new sources of revenue were a necessity for the 
Empire. 

The Seven Years War had increased the national 
debt to $700,000,000 and it had become necessary to 
maintain a great navy and large standing armies in 
both Europe and America. Inasmuch as a consider- 
able portion of the annual budget was used to sup- 
port troops to overawe the Indians and maintain the 
conquest of Canada it was thought reasonable by 
Grenville, the chancellor of the exchequer, that the 
colonies should share in the expense. Accordingly 
he proposed the Stamp Act, a measure designed to 
raise sufficient money to pay one-third of the annual 
cost of maintaining the army in America. 

After the colonists had been given a year in which 
to consider the details of the measure, he met their 
agents and expressed a desire to alter the bill if he 
could make it more agreeable to their wishes. Benja- 
min Franklin said that the old constitutional method 
of asking the assemblies to grant funds was preferable 
to the system of involuntary contribution embodied in 
the Stamp Act. Grenville replied that in the past when 

11 



12 AMERICAN TAXATION 

voluntary grants were in vogue the colonies had been 
unable to agree on the proportion of expense that each 
should bear, a fact that Franklin could not deny. 
The conference ended without material change in the 
proposed bill which was passed by the House of Com- 
mons with slight opposition in March 1765. 

This act was planned to furnish a revenue of 
$300,000, all of which was to be applied toward the 
support of troops in America. The bill, however, 
was received by the colonists with great indignation. 
They were willing to contribute to the expenses of the 
Imperial government, if the King would ask the colo- 
nial assemblies to make grants; but they were un- 
willing to be taxed by Parliament so long as they were 
not represented in the House of Commons. Accord- 
ingly the Americans refused to use the stamped paper 
required by the law for nearly all commercial trans- 
actions. Business practically ceased. Rioting oc- 
curred in many cities, and criticism of the policy of the 
British ministry became daily more bitter. 

On January 14, 1766, when Parliament assembled, 
the King's speech again asserted the right to tax 
America. Pitt was present although he had but re- 
cently recovered from a severe illness. Unfamiliar 
with the calendar, because of his absence of nearly a 
year, he did not know that American taxation was 
to be considered; but when the subject was discussed, 
so impressed was he by the seriousness of the moment 
that he spoke extemporaneously with all the fire that 
had made his earlier speeches famous. Many years 
of Parliamentary service and continuous study of con- 
ditions in America, made his words authoritative. His 
speech produced an immediate change in the official 
attitude toward America ; and he was able within the 
next few weeks so to organize the advocates and lovers 



AMERICAN TAXATION 13 

of English liberty that on March 18, 1766, the ob- 
noxious Stamp Act was repealed. 



AMERICAN taxation- 
William Pitt, Earl of Chatham 

It is a long time, Mr. Speaker, since I have attended in 
Parliament. When the resolution was taken in this House 
to tax America, I was ill in bed. If I could have endured 
to be carried 1 in my bed — so great was the agitation of 
my mind for the consequences — I would have solicited 
some kind hand to have laid me down on this floor, to 
have borne my testimony against it! It is now T an act 
that has passed. I would speak with decency of every 
act of this House ; but I must beg the indulgence of the 
House to speak of it with freedom. 

I hope a day may soon be appointed to consider the 
state of the nation with respect to America. I hope gen- 
tlemen will come to this debate with all the temper and 
impartiality that his majesty recommends, 2 and the im- 
portance of the subject requires; 3 a subject of greater im- 
portance than ever engaged the attention of this House, 
that subject only excepted, when, near a century ago, it 
was the question whether you yourselves were to be bond 
or free. 

I will only speak to one point — a point w^hich seems not 
to have been generally understood, I mean to the right. 
Some gentlemen seem to have considered it as a point of 
honor. If gentlemen consider it in that light, they leave 
all measures of right and wrong to follow a delusion that 
may lead to destruction. It is my opinion that this king- 
dom has no right to lay a tax upon the colonies. At the 
same time, I assert the authority of this kingdom over 



14 WILLIAM PITT, EARL OF CHATHAM 

the colonies to be sovereign and supreme, in every cir- 
cumstance of government and legislation whatsoever. 
They are the subjects of this kingdom, equally entitled 
with yourselves to all the natural rights of mankind and 
the peculiar privileges of Englishmen; equally bound by 
its laws, and equally participating in the constitution of 
this free country. The Americans are the sons, not the 
bastards, of England! Taxation is no part of the gov- 
erning or legislative power. The taxes are a voluntary 
gift and grant of the Commons alone. In legislation the 
three estates of the realm are alike concerned; but the 
concurrence of the peers and the Crown to tax is only 
necessary to clothe it with the form of a law. The gift 
and grant is of the Commons alone. 

In the ancient days, the Crown, the barons, and the 
clergy possessed the lands. In those days, the barons 
and the clergy gave and granted to the Crown. 
They gave and granted what was their own! At 
present, since the discovery of America, and other cir- 
cumstances permitting, the Commons are become the pro- 
prietors of the laad. The church (God bless it!) has but 
a pittance. The property of the lords, compared with 
that of the Commons, is a drop of water in the ocean; 
and this House represents those Commons, the proprietors 
of the lands ; and those proprietors virtually represent the 
rest of the inhabitants. When, therefore, in this House 
we give and grant, we give and grant what is our own. 
But in an American tax, what do we do? "We, your 
majesty's Commons for Great Britain, give and grant to 
your majesty " — what? Our own property ! No! "We 
give and grant to your majesty " the property of your 
majesty's Commons of America! It is an absurdity in 
terms. 

The distinction between legislation and taxation 4 is 
essentially necessary to liberty. The crown and the peers 



AMERICAN TAXATION 15 

are equally legislative powers with the Commons. If tax- 
ation be a part of simple legislation, the Crown and the 
peers have rights in taxation as well as yourselves; rights 
which they will claim, which they will exercise, whenever 
the principle can be supported by power. 

There is an idea in some that the colonies are virtually 
represented in the House. I would fain know by whom 
an American is represented here. Is he represented by 
any knight of the shire, in any county in this kingdom? 
Would to God that respectable representation was aug- 
mented to a greater number! Or will you tell him that he 
is represented by any representative of a borough? — a 
borough which, perhaps, its own representative never 
saw! This is what is called the rotten part of the con- 
stitution. It can not continue a century. If it does not 
drop, it must be amputated. The idea of a virtual rep- 
resentation 5 of America in this House is the most con- 
temptible idea that ever entered the head of a man. It 
does not deserve a serious refutation. 

The Commons of America represented in their several 
assemblies have ever been in possession of the exercise of 
this, their constitutional right, of giving and granting 
their own money. They would have been slaves if they 
had not enjoyed it! At the same time, this kingdom, as 
the supreme governing and legislative power, has always 
bound the colonies by her laws, by her regulations, and 
restrictions in trade, in navigation, in manufactures, in 
every thing except that of taking their money out of their 
pockets without their consent. 

Since the accession of King William, many ministers, 
some of great, others of more moderate abilities, have 
taken the lead of government. None of these thought, 
or even dreamed, of robbing the colonies of their constitu- 
tional rights. That was reserved to mark the era of the 
late administration. Not that there were wanting some, 



16 WILLIAM PITT, EARL OF CHATHAM 

when I had the honor to serve his majesty, to propose to 
me to burn my fingers with an American stamp act. 
With the enemy at their back, with our bayonets at their 
breast, in the day of their distress, perhaps the Americans 
would have submitted to the imposition; but it would 
have been taking an ungenerous, an unjust advantage. 
The gentleman boasts of his bounties to America! Are 
not these bounties intended finally for the benefit of this 
kingdom? If not, he has misapplied the national 
treasures ! 

I am no courtier of America. 6 I stand up for this king- 
dom. I maintain that the Parliament has a right to bind, 
to restrain America. Our legislative power over the colo- 
nies is sovereign and supreme. When it ceases to be sov- 
ereign and supreme, I would advise every gentleman to 
sell his lands, if he can, and embark for that country. 
When two countries are connected together like England 
and her colonies, without being incorporated, the one 
must necessarily govern. The greater must rule the less. 
But she must so rule it as not to contradict the funda- 
mental principles that are common to both. 

A great deal has been said without doors of the power, 
the strength of America. It is a topic that ought to be 
cautiously meddled with. In a good cause, on a sound 
bottom, the force of this country can crush America to 
atoms. I know the valor of your troops. I know the 
skill of your officers. There is not a company of foot 
that has served in America out of which you may not pick 
a man of sufficient knowledge and experience to make a 
governor of a colony there. But on this ground* on the 
Stamp Act, which so many here will think a crying in- 
justice, I am one who will lift up my hands against it. 

In such a cause your success would be hazardous. 
America, if she fell, would fall like the strong man; she 
would embrace the pillars of the state and pull down the 



AMERICAN TAXATION 17 

Constitution with her. Is this your boasted peace — not 
to sheathe the sword in the scabbard, but to sheathe it in 
the bowels of your countrymen? Will you quarrel with 
yourselves, now the whole house of Bourbon 7 is united 
against you ; while France disturbs your fisheries in New- 
foundland, embarrasses your slave trade to Africa, and 
withholds from your subjects in Canada their property 
stipulated by treaty; while the ransom for the Manilas 
is denied by Spain, and its gallant conqueror basely tra- 
duced into a mean plunderer — a gentleman whose noble 
and generous spirit would do honor to the proudest 
grandee of the country? 

The Americans have not acted in all things with pru- 
dence and temper; they have been wronged; they have 
been driven to madness by injustice. Will you punish 
them for the madness you have occasioned? Rather let 
prudence and temper come first from this side. I will 
undertake for America that she will follow the example. 

Upon the whole, I will beg leave to tell the House 
what is my opinion. It is, that the Stamp Act be repealed 
absolutely, totally, and immediately. That the reason for 
the repeal be assigned — viz., because it was founded on 
an erroneous principle. At the same time, let the sover- 
eign authority of this country over the colonies be as- 
serted in as strong terms as can be devised, and be made 
to extend to every point of legislation whatsoever; that 
we may bind their trade, confine their manufactures, and 
exercise every power whatsoever, except that of taking 
money from their pockets without their consent. 

What does Chatham recognize as the supreme legal authority 
and source of law for both England and America? 

What were Chatham's reasons for considering the taxation of 
America the most important question that had come before the 
House of Commons since the days of the Stuarts? 

What is the distinction made by Chatham between the right to 
tax and the right to legislate? 



1 8 WILLIAM PITT, EARL OF CHATHAM 

Does modern law recognize this distinction? 

Point out persuasive elements in Chatham's speech. Did he 
understand the temper of Englishmen? 

What statements in the last paragraph show that he did not 
understand the temper of Americans? 

What evidence is there in Chatham's speech that a movement 
for the independence of America was already under way? 



WAR WITH AMERICA 

February 6, 1775 

The favorable impression created by the repeal of the 
Stamp Act was largely destroyed by the passage soon 
after of the Declaratory Act in which Parliament laid 
no import or duty but asserted its right to tax 
America. This action was a colossal blunder, inas- 
much as it ignored the fact that the Americans had 
not refused to furnish money to support the govern- 
ment but had denied this very " right " of taxation 
which now was expressly reaffirmed. Before the end 
of the year, also, King George III, who had no sym- 
pathy with the democratic aspirations of the colonists, 
induced Parliament to lay new duties on tea and other 
articles imported by the Americans. 

Continued disorder in America and decreasing trade 
again brought about the repeal in March, 1770, of all 
these duties except that on tea. The latter duty the 
King determined to retain, it is said, from a desire to 
" try the question with America." In the hope of mak- 
ing the tax more acceptable the duty was reduced to 
six cents a pound, which permitted tea to be sold in 
America at a cheaper price than in England. The 
colonists, however, who were seeking a democratic 
system of taxation rather than low taxes, refused to 
pay the decreased duty. A mob threw four ship loads 
of tea into Boston harbor. Incensed with their lack 
of respect for the royal authority, the King induced 
Parliament to take away the old charter of Massa- 
chusetts and to pass other acts of a drastic nature. 

19 



20 JOHN WILKES 

As these measures threatened to destroy English 
liberty in America, concerted action on the part of 
the colonists was demanded. On September i, 1774, 
the Continental Congress met in Philadelphia and 
passed resolutions in which trade with England was 
boycotted. Nevertheless in a very calm and conciliat- 
ing Petition to the King the Congress once more re- 
affirmed its loyalty to the Empire and asserted its 
willingness to pay all taxes justly levied in accordance 
with the English Constitution. Clashes between armed 
citizens and British troops, nevertheless, had already 
occurred more than once. On February 6, 1775, when 
John Wilkes rose in Parliament to speak it was clearly 
evident that America and the Mother Country were on 
the verge of war. 



WAR WITH AMERICA * 

John Wilkes 

I am surprised that in a business of so much moment as 
this before the House, respecting the British colonies in 
America, a cause which comprehends almost every ques- 
tion relative to the common rights of mankind, almost 
every question of policy and legislation, it should be re- 
solved to proceed with so little circumspection, or rather 
with so much precipitation and heedless imprudence. 
With what temerity are we assured that the same men 
who have been so often overwhelmed with praises for 
their attachment to this country, for their forwardness to 
grant it the necessary succors, for the valor they have 
signalized in its defense, have all at once so degenerated 
from their ancient manners as to merit the appellation of 
seditious, ungrateful, impious rebels! But if such a 



WAR WITH AMERICA 21 

change has, indeed, been wrought in the minds of this 
most loyal people, it must at least be admitted that affec- 
tions so extraordinary could only have been produced by 
some very powerful cause. 1 But who is ignorant, who 
needs to be told of the new madness that infatuates our 
ministers? Who has not seen the tyrannical counsels they 
have pursued for the last ten years? They would now 
have us carry to the foot of the throne 2 a resolution 
stamped with rashness and injustice, fraught with blood, 
and a horrible futurity. But before this be allowed them, 
before the signal of civil war be given, before they are 
permitted to force Englishmen to sheath their swords in 
the bowels of their fellow-subjects, I hope this House 
will consider the rights of humanity, the original ground 
and cause of the present dispute. Have we justice on our 
side? No; assuredly no. He must be altogether a 
stranger to the British Constitution who does not know 
that contributions are voluntary gifts of the people; and 
singularly blind not to perceive that the words " Liberty 
and property " so grateful to English ears, are nothing 
better than mockery and insult to the Americans, if their 
property can be taken without their consent. And what 
motive can there exist for this new rigor, for these ex- 
traordinary measures? Have not the Americans always 
demonstrated the utmost zeal and liberality whenever 
their succors have been required by the Mother Country? 
In the last two wars they gave you more than you 
asked for, and more than their facilities warranted ; they 
were not only liberal toward you, but prodigal of their 
substance. They fought gallantly and victoriously by 
your side, with equal valor, against our and their enemy, 
the common enemy of the liberties of Europe and 
America, the ambitious and faithless French, whom we 
now fear and flatter. And even now at a moment when 
you are planning their destruction, when you are brand- 



22 JOHN WILKES 

ing them with the odious appellation of rebels, what is 
their language, what their protestation? Read, in the 
name of heaven, the late petition of the Congress to the 
King, and you will find " they are ready and willing, as 
they have ever been, to demonstrate their loyalty by 
exerting their utmost efforts in granting supplies and 
raising forces when constitutionally required. " And yet 
we hear it vociferated by some inconsiderate individuals 
that the Americans wish to abolish the Navigation Act; 
that they intend to throw off the supremacy of Great 
Britain. But would to God those assertions were not 
rather a provocation than the truth! They ask nothing, 
for such are the words of their petition, but for peace, 
liberty, and safety. They wish not a diminution of the 
royal prerogative; they solicit not any new right. They 
are ready, on the contrary, to defend this prerogative, to 
maintain the royal authority, and to draw closer the bonds 
of their connection with Great Britain. But our minis- 
ters, perhaps to punish others for their own faults, are 
sedulously endeavoring, not only to relax those powerful 
ties, but to dissolve and sever them forever. Their ad- 
dress represents the Province of Massachusetts as in a 
state of actual rebellion. The other provinces are held 
out to our indignation, as aiding and abetting. Many 
arguments have been employed by some learned gentle- 
men among us to comprehend them all in the same of- 
fense, and to involve them all in the same proscription. 

Whether their present state is that of rebellion, or of 
a fit and just resistance to unlawful acts of power, to 
our attempts to rob them of their property and liberties, 
as they imagine, I shall not declare. But I well know 
what will follow, 3 nor, however strange and harsh it 
may appear to some, shall I hesitate to announce it, that 
I may not be accused hereafter of having failed in my 
duty to my country, on so grave an occasion, and at the 



WAR WITH AMERICA 23 

approach of such direful calamities. Know, then, a suc- 
*ul resistance is a revolution, not a rebellion; rebel- 
lion, indeed, appears on the back of a flying enemy, but 
revolution flames on the breastplate of the victorious war- 
rior. Who can tell whether in consequence of this day's 
violent and mad address to his majesty, the scabbard may 
not be thrown away by them, as well as by us; and 
whether in a few years the independent Americans may 
not celebrate the glorious era of the Revolution of 1775, 
as we do that of 1688? The generous effort of our fore- 
fathers for freedom, heaven crowned with success, or 
their noble blood had dyed our scaffolds, like that of 
Scottish traitors and rebels; and the period of our history 
which does us the most honor would have been deemed 
a rebellion against the lawful authority of the prince, not 
a resistance authorized by all the laws of God and man, 
not the expulsion of a detested tyrant. 

I can no more comprehend the policy than acknowledge 
the justice of your deliberations. Where is your force, 
what are your armies, how are they to be recruited, and 
how supported ? The single Province of Massachusetts 
has at this moment thirty thousand men, well trained and 
disciplined, and can bring in case of emergency ninety 
thousand into the field ; and, doubt not they will do it, 
when all that is dear is at stake, when forced to defend 
their liberty- and property against their cruel oppressors. 
The right honorable gentleman with the blue riband 4 
assures us that ten thousand of our troops and four Irish 
regiments will make their brains turn in the head a little, 
and strike them aghast with terror. But where does the 
author of this exquisite scheme propose to send his army? 
Boston, perhaps, you may lay in ashes, or it may be made 
a strong garrison ; but the province will be lost to you. 
You will hold Boston as you hold Gibraltar, in the midst 
of a country which will not be yours; the whole Ameri- 



24 JOHN WILKES 

can continent will remain in the power of your enemies. 
Where your fleets and armies are stationed, the possession 
will be secured while they continue; but all the rest will 
be lost. In the great scale of empire, you will decline, I 
fear, from the decision of this day; and the Americans 
will rise in independence, to power, to all the greatness 
of the most renowned states — for they build on the solid 
basis of general public liberty. 

How according to Wilkes were the Americans provoked to 
rebellion? 

What rights did Wilkes believe the colonies wished England 
to grant them? 

What reason did Wilkes give for believing that the Ameri- 
cans would gain independence and rise to great power? 

Did his prophecy prove true in all details? 

To what motives did Wilkes appeal in this speech? 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 

March 22, 1775 

As the objectionable measures suggested by King 
George III were formulated by Lord North's ministry 
and passed one after another, discontent in America 
steadily increased. With a fine sarcasm one legisla- 
tive body after another declared that the colonies 
would train soldiers in order to save the Mother Coun- 
try the necessity oi taxing Americans to provide troops 
for their defense. In nearly all the provinces com- 
panies of soldiers had in fact been equipped and 
drilled. 

In Parliament Pitt, Wilkes, Barre, and others had 
espoused the cause of America in vain. The King and 
his ministry were determined, in the face of all ex- 
pediency, to assert their right to tax America. The 
most that Lord North was willing to concede was that 
any colony should be exempted from taxation if it 
had granted for the common defense of the Empire an 
amount " according to the condition, circumstances, 
and situation of such colony " satisfactory to the Gov- 
ernment. Although this bill conferred on the assem- 
blies merely the form of making grants and still re- 
tained for Parliament the right of taxation, the 
measure was intended to be conciliatory. As Parlia- 
ment seemed for the moment inclined to consider a 
gentler policy, Burke seized the opportunity to offer, 
on March 22, 1775, conciliatory resolutions that met 
adequately nearly all the constitutional demands of the 

25 



26 EDMUND BURKE 

colonists. The partition of the Empire would prob- 
ably have been avoided had not the House of Com- 
mons by a vote of 270 to 78 rejected his proposals. 

Members of Parliament who listened to Burke's 
words were not at the time sufficiently impressed to 
lend their votes, but many, after perusal of the printed 
speech, when it was too late, were won over to his 
views. Fox, an orator of the first rank and a con- 
temporary of Burke was so thoroughly convinced of 
the justice and soundness of Burke's plan that he 
urged Members of Parliament " to peruse the Speech 
on Conciliation again and again, to study it, to imprint 
it on their minds, to impress it on their hearts/' Al- 
though Burke's speech failed to secure for Americans 
the rights to which as English subjects they were 
entitled, it recorded in imperishable form the prin- 
ciples of a just and generous policy that must here- 
after form a part of all humane and enlightened 
government. 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 

Edmund Burke 

The proposition is peace. Not peace through the medium 
of war; not peace to be hunted through the labyrinth of 
intricate and endless negotiations; not peace to arise out 
of universal discord, fomented from principle, in all parts 
of the empire; not peace to depend on the juridical de- 
termination 1 of perplexing questions, or the precise mark- 
ing of shadowy boundaries of a complex government. It 
is simple peace, sought in its natural course, and in its 
ordinary haunts. It is peace sought in the spirit of peace, 
and laid in principles purely pacific. I propose, by re- 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 27 

moving the ground of the difference, and by restoring 
the former unsuspecting confidence of the colonies in the 
Mother Country, to ^\ve permanent satisfaction to your 
people; and (far from a scheme of ruling by discord) to 
reconcile them to each other in the same act, and by the 
bond of the very same interest which reconciles them to 
British government. 

My idea is nothing more. Refined policy ever has 
been the parent of confusion ; and ever will be so, as 
long as the world endures. Plain good intention, which 
is as easily discovered at the first view, as fraud is surely 
detected at last, is, let me say, of no mean force in the 
government of mankind. Genuine simplicity of heart is a 
healing and cementing principle. My plan, therefore, 
being formed upon the most simple grounds imaginable, 
may disappoint some people when they hear it. It has 
nothing to recommend it to the pruriency of curious ears. 
There is nothing at all new and captivating in it. It has 
nothing of the splendor of the project which has been 
lately laid upon your table by the noble lord in the blue 
ribbon. It does not propose to fill your lobby with squab- 
bling colony agents, 2 who will require the interposition 
of your mace at every instant to keep the peace among 
them. It does not institute a magnificent auction of 
finance, where captivated provinces come to general ran- 
som by bidding against each other, until you knock 
down the hammer, and determine a proportion of pay- 
ments beyond all the powers of algebra to equalize and 
settle. 

The plan which I shall presume to suggest derives, 
however, one great advantage from the proposition and 
registry of that noble lord's project, — the idea of con- 
ciliation is admissible. First, the House, in accepting 
the resolution moved by the noble lord, has admitted, not- 
withstanding the menacing front of our address, notwith- 



28 EDMUND BURKE 

standing our heavy bills of pains and penalties, 3 that we 
do not think ourselves precluded from all ideas of free 
grace and bounty. 

The House has gone further: it has declared concilia- 
tion admissible, previous to any submission on the part of 
America. It has even shot a good deal beyond that mark, 
and has admitted that the complaints of our former mode 
of exerting the right of taxation were not wholly un- 
founded. That right thus exerted is allowed to have 
had something reprehensible in it, something unwise, or 
something grievous; since, in the midst of our heat and 
resentment, we, of ourselves, have proposed a capital alter- 
ation; and, in order to get rid of what seemed so very 
exceptionable, have instituted a mode that is altogether 
new ; one that is, indeed, wholly alien from all the ancient 
Qiethods and forms of Parliament. 

The principle of this proceeding is large enough for 
my purpose. The means proposed by the noble lord for 
carrying his ideas into execution, I think, indeed, are 
very indifferently suited to the end; and this I shall en- 
deavor to show you before I sit down. But, for the 
present, I take my ground on the admitted principle. I 
mean to give peace. Peace implies reconciliation; and, 
where there has been a material dispute, reconciliation 
does in a manner always imply concession on the one part 
or on the other. In this state of things I make no diffi- 
culty in affirming that the proposal ought to originate 
from us. Great and acknowledged force is not impaired, 
either in effect or in opinion, by an unwillingness to exert 
itself. The superior power may offer peace with honor 
and with safety. Such an offer from such a power will 
be attributed to magnanimity. But the concessions of the 
weak are the concessions of fear. When such a one is 
disarmed, he is wholly at the mercy of his superior; and 
he loses forever that time and those chances, which, as 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 29 

they happen to all men, are the strength and resources of 
all inferior power. 

The capital leading questions on which you must this 
day decide are these two: First, whether you ought to 
concede ; and, secondly, what your concessions ought to be. 
On the first of these questions we have gained (as I have 
just taken the liberty of observing to you) some ground. 
But I am sensible that a good deal more is still to be 
done. Indeed, Sir, to enable us to determine both on the 
one and the other of these great questions with a firm and 
precise judgment, I think it may be necessary to consider 
distinctly the true nature and the peculiar circumstances 
of the object 4 which we have before us; because after all 
our struggle, whether w r e w T ill or not, we must govern 
America according to that nature and to those circum- 
stances, and not according to our own imaginations, not 
according to abstract ideas of right; by no means accord- 
ing to mere general theories of government, the resort to 
which appears to me, in our present situation, no better 
than arrant trifling. I shall therefore endeavor, with 
your leave, to lay before you some of the most material 
of these circumstances in as full and as clear a manner as 
I am able to state them. 

The first thing that we have to consider with regard 
to the nature of the object is, the number of people in 
the colonies. I have taken for some years a good deal of 
pains on that point. I can by no calculation justify my- 
self in placing the number below two millions of inhabi- 
tants of our own European blood and color, besides at 
least 500,000 others, who form no inconsiderable part of 
the strength and opulence of the whole. 

But the population of this country, the great and grow- 
ing population, though a very important consideration, 
will lose much of its weight if not combined with other 
circumstances. The commerce of your colonies is out 



3 o EDMUND BURKE 

of all proportion beyond the numbers of the people. 
When we speak of the commerce with our colonies, fiction 
lags after truth, invention is unfruitful, and imagination 
cold and barren. 

So far, Sir, as to the importance of the object in the 
view of its commerce, as concerned in the exports from 
England. If I were to detail the imports, I could show 
how many enjoyments they procure, which deceive the 
burden of life; how many materials which invigorate the 
springs of national industry, and extend and animate every 
part of our foreign and domestic commerce. This would 
be a curious subject indeed, but I must prescribe bounds 
to myself in a matter so vast and various. 

I pass, therefore, to the colonies in another point of 
view — their agriculture. This they have prosecuted with 
such a spirit, that, besides feeding plentifully their own 
growing multitude, their annual export of grain, com- 
prehending rice, has some years ago exceeded a million in 
value. Of their last harvest, I am persuaded they will 
export much more. At the beginning of the century some 
of these colonies imported corn from the Mother Country : 
for some time past the Old World has been fed from the 
New. The scarcity which you have felt would have been 
a desolating famine, if this child of your old age, with a 
true filial piety, with a Roman charity, 5 had not put the 
full breast of its youthful exuberance to the mouth of its 
exhausted parent. 

As to the wealth which the colonies have drawn from 
the sea by their fisheries, you had all that matter fully 
opened at your bar. You surely thought those acquisi- 
tions of value, for they seemed even to excite your envy, 6 
and yet the spirit by which that enterprising employment 
has been exercised ought rather, in my opinion, to have 
raised your esteem and admiration. And pray, Sir, what 
in the world is equal to it ? Pass by the other parts, and 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 31 

look at the manner in which the people of New England 
have of late carried on the whale fishery. While we fol- 
low them among the tumbling mountains of ice, and be- 
hold them penetrating into the deepest frozen recesses of 
Hudson's Bay and Davis's Straits, while we are looking 
for them beneath the arctic circle, we hear that they have 
pierced into the opposite region of polar cold, that they 
are at the antipodes, and engaged under the frozen Ser- 
pent 7 of the south. Falkland Island, which seemed too 
remote and romantic an object for the grasp of national 
ambition, is but a stage and resting place in the progress 
of their victorious industry. Nor is the equinoctial heat 
more discouraging to them than the accumulated winter 
of both poles. We know that while some of them draw 
the line and strike the harpoon on the coast of Africa, 
others run the longitude and pursue their gigantic game 
along the coast of Brazil. No sea but what is vexed by 
their fisheries. No climate that is not witness to their 
toils. Neither the perseverance of Holland, nor the ac- 
tivity of France, nor the dexterous and firm sagacity of 
English enterprise, ever carried this most perilous mode 
of hardy industry to the extent to which it has been 
pushed by this recent people — a people who are still, as it 
were, but in the gristle, and not yet hardened into the 
bone of manhood. 

When I contemplate these things; when I know that 
the colonies in general owe little or nothing to any care 
of ours, and that they are not squeezed into this happy 
form by the constraints of watchful and suspicious gov- 
ernment, but, that, through a wise and salutary neglect, 
a generous nature has been suffered to take her own way 
to perfection — when I reflect upon these effects, when I 
see how profitable they have been to us, I feel all the 
pride of power sink, and all presumption in the wisdom of 
human contrivances melt and die away within me. My 



32 EDMUND BURKE 

rigor relents. I pardon something to the spirit of liberty. 

I am sensible, Sir, that all which I have asserted in 
my detail is admitted in the gross ; but that quite a differ- 
ent conclusion is drawn from it. America, gentlemen 
say, is a noble object: it is an object well worth fighting 
for. Certainly it is, if fighting a people be the best way of 
gaining them. Gentlemen in this respect will be led to 
their choice of means by their complexions and their 
habits. Those who understand the military art will of 
course have some predilection for it. Those who wield 
the thunder of the state may have more confidence in the 
efficacy of arms. But I confess, possibly for want of this 
knowledge, my opinion is much more in favor of prudent 
management than of force — considering force not as an 
odious, but a feeble, instrument for preserving a people 
so numerous, so active, so growing, so spirited as this, in 
a profitable and subordinate connection with us. 

First, Sir, permit me to observe that the use of force 
alone is but temporary. It may subdue for a moment, but 
it does not remove the necessity of subduing again; and 
a nation is not governed which is perpetually to be con- 
quered. 

My next objection is its uncertainty. Terror is not 
always the effect of force ; and an armament is not a vic- 
tory. If you do not succeed, you are without resource; 
for, conciliation failing, force remains; but, force failing, 
no further hope of reconciliation is left. Power and au- 
thority are sometimes bought by kindness, but they can 
never be begged as alms by an impoverished and defeated 
violence. 

A further objection to force is, that you impair the 
object by your very endeavors to preserve it. The thing 
you fought for is not the thing which you recover; but 
depreciated, sunk, wasted, and consumed in the contest. 
Nothing less will content me than whole America. I do 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 33 

not choose to consume its strength along with our own; 
because in all parts it is the British strength that I con- 
sume. I do not choose to be caught by a foreign enemy 
at the end of this exhausting conflict, and still less in the 
midst of it. I may escape ; but I can make no insurance 
against such an event. Let me add that I do not choose 
wholly to break the American spirit; because it is the 
spirit that has made the country. 

Lastly, we have no sort of experience in favor of force 
as an instrument in the rule of our colonies. Their 
growth and their utility has been owing to methods alto- 
gether different. Our ancient indulgence has been said 
to be pursued to a fault. It may be so. But we know, 
if feeling is evidence, that our fault was more tolerable 
than our attempt to mend it; and our sin far more salu- 
tary than our penitence. 

These, Sir, are my reasons for not entertaining that 
high opinion of untried force, by which many gentlemen, 
for whose sentiments in other particulars I have great 
respect, seem to be so greatly captivated. But there is 
still behind a third consideration concerning this object, 
which serves to determine my opinion on the sort of 
policy which ought to be pursued in the management of 
America, even more than its population and its commerce: 
I mean its temper and character. 

In this character of the Americans a love of freedom 
is the predominating feature which marks and distin- 
guishes the whole ; and as an ardent is always a jealous 
affection, your colonies become suspicious, restive, and un- 
tractable, whenever they see the least attempt to wrest 
from them by force, or shuffle from them by chicane, what 
they think the only advantage worth living for. This 
fierce spirit of liberty is stronger in the English colonies 
probably than in any other people of the earth ; and this 
from a great variety of powerful causes. It has grown 



34 EDMUND BURKE 

with the growth of the people in your colonies, and in- 
creased with the increase of their wealth — a spirit that, 
unhappily meeting with an exercise of power in England, 
which, however lawful, is not reconcilable to any ideas of 
liberty, much less with theirs, has kindled this flame that 
is ready to consume us. 

I do not mean to commend either the spirit in this 
excess, or the moral causes which produce it. Perhaps a 
more smooth and accommodating spirit of freedom in 
them would be more acceptable to us. Perhaps ideas of 
liberty might be desired, more reconcilable with an arbi- 
trary and boundless authority. Perhaps we might wish 
the colonists to be persuaded that their liberty is more 
secure when held in trust for them by us (as their guar- 
dians during a perpetual minority) than with any part 
of it in their own hands. The question is, not whether 
their spirit deserves praise or blame, but — what, in the 
name of God, shall we do with it? 

In order to prove that the Americans have no right to 
their liberties, we are every day endeavoring to subvert 
the maxims which preserve the whole spirit of our own. 
To prove that the Americans ought not to be free, we are 
obliged to depreciate the value of freedom itself ; and we 
never seem to gain a paltry advantage over them in de- 
bate, without attacking some of those prnciples, or derid- 
ing some of those feelings, for which our ancestors have 
shed their blood. 

But, Sir, in wishing to put an end to pernicious ex- 
periments, I do not mean to preclude the fullest inquiry. 
Far from it. Far from deciding on a sudden or partial 
view, I would patiently go round and round the subject, 
and survey it minutely in every possible aspect. Sir, if I 
were capable of engaging you to an equal attention, I 
would state that, as far as I am capable of discerning, 
there are but three ways of proceeding relative to this 



CONCILIATION WITH AMKRICA 35 

stubborn spirit which prevails in your colonies and dis- 
turbs your government. These are, to change that spirit, 8 
as inconvenient, by removing the causes ; to prosecute it 
as criminal ; or to comply with it as necessary. I would 
not be guilty of an imperfect enumeration: I can think of 
but these three. Another has indeed been started — that 
of giving up the colonies; but it met so slight a reception 
that I do not think myself obliged to dwell a great 
while upon it. It is nothing but a little sally of anger, 
like the forwardness of peevish children who, when they 
can not get all they would have, are resolved to take 
nothing. 

The first of these plans, to change the spirit, as incon- 
venient, by removing the causes, I think is the most like 
a systematic proceeding. It is radical in its principle; 
but it is attended with great difficulties, some of them 
little short, as I conceive, of impossibilities. This will 
appear by examining into the plans which have been pro- 
posed. 

As the growing population in the colonies is evidently 
one cause of their resistance, it was last session mentioned 
in both Houses by men of weight, and received not with- 
out applause, that in order to check this evil, it would be 
proper for the crown to make no further grants of land. 
But to this scheme there are two objections. The first, 
that there is already so much unsettled land in private 
hands as to afford room for an immense future population, 
although the crown not only withheld its grants, but anni- 
hilated its soil. If this be the case, then the only effect 
of this avarice of desolation, this hoarding of a royal wil- 
derness, would be to raise the value of the possessions in 
the hands of the great private monopolists, without any 
adequate check to the growing and alarming mischief of 
population. But if you stopped your grants, what would 
be the consequence? The people would occupy without 



36 EDMUND BURKE 

grants. They have already so occupied in many places. 
You can not station garrisons in every part of these 
deserts. 

To impoverish the colonies in general, and in particular 
to arrest the noble course of their marine enterprises, 
would be a more easy task. I freely confess it. We have 
shown a disposition to a system of this kind ; a disposition 
even to continue the restraint after the offense ; looking on 
ourselves as rivals to our colonies, and persuaded that of 
course we must gain all that they shall lose. Much mis- 
chief we may certainly do. The power inadequate to 
all other things is often more than sufficient for this. I 
do not look on the direct and immediate power of the 
colonies to resist our violence as very formidable. In 
this, however, I may be mistaken. But when I consider 
that we have colonies for no purpose but to be serviceable 
to us, it seems to my poor understanding a little prepos- 
terous to make them unserviceable in order to keep them 
obedient. It is, in truth, nothing more than the old, and, 
as I thought, exploded problem of tyranny, which pro- 
poses to beggar its subjects into submission. But remem- 
ber, when you have completed your system of impoverish- 
ment, that Nature still proceeds in her ordinary course; 
that discontent will increase with misery; and that there 
are critical moments in the fortune of all states, when 
they who are too weak to contribute to your prosperity 
may be strong enough to complete your ruin. Spoliatis 
arma super sunt , . 10 

The temper and character which prevail in our colonies 
are, I am afraid, unalterable by any human art. We can 
not, I fear, falsify the pedigree of this fierce people, and 
persuade them that they are not sprung from a nation in 
whose veins the blood of freedom circulates. The lan- 
guage in which they would hear you tell them this tale 
would detect the imposition; your speech would betray 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 37 

you. An Englishman is the unfittest person on earth to 
argue another Englishman Into slavery. 

But let us suppose all these moral difficulties got over. 
The ocean remains. 11 You can not pump this dry; and 
as long as it continues in its present bed, so long all the 
causes which weaken authority by distance will continue. 

"Ye gods, annihilate but space and time 5 

And make two lovers happy ! " — 

was a pious and passionate prayer; but just as reasonable 
as many of the serious wishes of very grave and solemn 
politicians. 

If then, Sir, it seems almost desperate to think of any 
alterative course for changing the moral causes (and not 
quite easy to remove the natural) which produce preju- 
dices irreconcilable to the late exercise of our authority, 
but that the spirit infallibly will continue ; and continu- 
ing, will produce such effects as now embarrass us — the 
second mode under consideration is, to prosecute that 
spirit in its overt acts as criminal. 

At this proposition I must pause a moment. The thing 
seems a great deal too big for my ideas of jurisprudence. 
It should seem to my way of conceiving such matters that 
there is a very wide difference in reason and policy, be- 
tween the mode of proceeding on the irregular conduct of 
scattered individuals, or even of bands of men, who dis- 
turb order within the state, and the civil dissentions which 
may, from time to time, on great questions, agitate the 
several communities which compose a great empire. It 
looks to me to be narrow and pedantic to apply the ordi- 
nary ideas of criminal justice to this great public contest. 
I do not know the method of drawing up an indictment 
against a whole people. I can not insult and ridicule the 
feelings of millions of my fellow-creatures as Sir Edward 



38 EDMUND BURKE 

Coke 12 insulted one excellent individual (Sir Walter 
Raleigh) at the bar. I hope I am not ripe to pass sentence 
on the gravest public bodies, intrusted with magistracies 
of great authority and dignity, and charged with the 
safety of their fellow-citizens, upon the very same title 
that I am. I really think, that for wise men, this is not 
judicious; for sober men, not decent; for minds tinctured 
with humanity, not mild and merciful. 

In this situation, let us seriously and coolly ponder. 
What is it we have got by all our menaces, which have 
been many and ferocious? What advantage have we 
derived from the penal laws we have passed, and which, 
for the time, have been severe and numerous? What 
advances have we made toward our object, by the send- 
ing of a force which, by land and sea, is no contemptible 
strength? Has the disorder abated? Nothing less. 
When I see things in this situation, after such confident 
hopes, bold promises, and active exertions, I can not for 
my life avoid a suspicion that the plan itself is not cor- 
rectly right. 

If, then, the removal of the causes of this spirit of 
American liberty be, for the greater part, or rather en- 
tirely, impracticable; if the ideas of criminal process be 
inapplicable, or, if applicable, are in the highest degree 
inexpedient, what way yet remains? No way is open but 
the third and last — to comply with the Amercan spirit as 
necessary ; or, if you please, to submit to it as a necessary 
evil. 13 

If we adopt this mode, if we mean to conciliate and 
concede, let us see of what nature the concession ought to 
be. To ascertain the nature of our concession, we must 
look at their complaint. The colonies complain that they 
have not the characteristic mark and seal of British free- 
dom. They complain that they are taxed in a Parliament 
in which they are not represented. If you mean to satisfy 



C )NCILIATION WITH AMERICA 39 

them at all, you must satisfy them with regard to this 
Complaint If you mean to please any people, you must 
Lve them the boon which they ask; not what you may 
think better for them, but of a kind totally different. 
Such an act may be a wise regulation, but it is no conces- 
sion ; whereas our present theme is the mode of giving 
satisfaction. 

I am not determining a point of law r ; I am restoring 
tranquillity ; and the general character and situation of a 
people must determine what sort of government is fitted 
for them. That point nothing else can or ought to de- 
termine. My idea, therefore, without considering 
whether wc yield as matter of right, or grant as matter of 
favor, is to admit the people of our colonies into an in- 
terest in the Constitution; and by recording that admis- 
sion in the journals of Parliament, to give them as strong 
an assurance as the nature of the thing will admit, that 
we mean forever to adhere to that solemn declaration of 
systematic indulgence. 

One fact is clear and indisputable: the public and 
avowed origin of this quarrel was on taxation. This 
quarrel has indeed brought on new disputes on new T ques- 
tions; but certainly the least bitter, and the few T est of all, 
on the trade laws. To judge which of the two be the 
real, radical cause of quarrel, we have to see w T hether the 
commercial dispute did, in order of time, precede the dis- 
pute on taxation. There is not a shadow of evidence 
for it. Next, to enable us to judge whether at this mo- 
ment a dislike to the trade laws be the real cause of 
quarrel, it is absolutely necessary to put the taxes out of 
the question by a repeal. See how the Americans act 
in this position, and then you will be able to discern cor- 
rectly what is the true object of the controversy, or 
whether any controversy at all will remain. Unless you 
consent to remove this cause of difference, it is impossible, 



40 EDMUND BURKE 

with decency, to assert that the dispute is not upon what 
it is avowed to be. And I would, Sir, recommend to 
your serious consideration, whether it be prudent to form 
a rule for punishing people, not on their own acts, but on 
your conjectures? Surely it is preposterous at the very 
best. It is not justifying your anger by their misconduct; 
but it is converting your ill will into their delinquency. 

" But the colonies will go further." 14 Alas! alas! 
when will this speculating against fact and reason end? 
What will quiet these panic fears which we entertain of 
the hostile effect of a conciliatory conduct? Is it true 
that no case can exist in which it is proper for the sover- 
eign to accede to the desires of his discontented subjects? 
Is there anything peculiar in this case to make a rule for 
itself? Is all authority of course lost when it is not 
pushed to the extreme? Is it a certain maxim that the 
fewer causes of dissatisfaction are left by government, the 
more the subject will be inclined to resist and rebel? 

All these objections being in fact no more than suspi- 
cions, conjectures, devinations, formed in defiance of fact 
and experience, they did not, Sir, discourage me from 
entertaining the idea of a conciliatory concession, founded 
on the principles which I have just stated. 

In forming a plan for this purpose, I endeavored to 
put myself in that frame of mind which was the most 
natural, and the most reasonable, and which was cer- 
tainly the most probable means of securing me from all 
error. I set out with a perfect distrust of my own abili- 
ties; a total renunciation of every speculation of my own; 
and with a profound reverence for the wisdom of our 
ancestors, who have left us the inheritance of so happy a 
constitution and so flourishing an empire, and what is a 
thousand times more valuable — the treasury of the 
maxims and principles which formed the one, and ob- 
tained the other. 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 41 

During the reigns of the kings of Spain of the Austrian 
family, whenever they were at a loss in the Spanish coun- 
cils, it was common for their statesmen to say that they 
ought to consult the genius of Philip the Second. The 
genius of Philip the Second 15 might mislead them; and 
the issue of their affairs showed that they had not chosen 
the most perfect standard. But, Sir, I am sure that I 
shall not be misled, when, in a case of constitutional diffi- 
cult}', I consult the genius of the English Constitution. 16 
Consulting at that oracle (it was with all due humility 
and piety) I found four capital examples in a similar case 
before me: those of Ireland, Wales, Chester, and Dur- 
ham. 

Now, if the doctrines of policy contained in these pre- 
ambles, and the force of these examples in the acts of 
Parliament, avail anything, what can be said against ap- 
plying them with regard to America? Are not the people 
of America as much Englishmen as the Welsh? The 
preamble of the Act of Henry the Eighth says the Welsh 
speak a language no way resembling that of his Majesty's 
English subjects. Are the Americans not as numerous? 
If we may trust the learned and accurate Judge Barring- 
ton's account of North Wales, and take that as a stand- 
ard to measure the rest, there is no comparison. The 
people can not amount to above 200,000 — not a tenth part 
of the number in the colonies. Is America in rebellion? 
Wales was hardly ever free from it. Have you attempted 
to govern America by penal statutes? You made fifteen 
in Wales. " But your legislative authority is perfect with 
regard to America! " Was it less perfect in Wales, Ches- 
ter, and Durham? "But America is virtually repre- 
sented! " What! does the electric force of virtual repre- 
sentation more easily pass over the Atlantic than pervade 
Wales, which lies in your neighborhood? or than Chester 
and Durham, surrounded by abundance of representation 



42 EDMUND BURKE 

that is actual and palpable? But, Sir, your ancestors 
thought this sort of virtual representation, however 
ample, to be totally insufficient for the freedom of the in- 
habitants of territories that are so near and comparatively 
so inconsiderable. How then can I think it sufficient for 
those which are infinitely greater and infinitely more 
remote ? 

You will now, Sir, perhaps, imagine that I am on the 
point of proposing to you a scheme for a representation 
of the colonies in Parliament. Perhaps I might be in- 
clined to entertain some such thought; but a great flood 
stops me in my course. Opposuit natura 17 — I can not 
remove the eternal barriers of the creation. The thing, 
in that mode, I do not know to be possible. As I meddle 
with no theory, I do not absolutely assert the impractica- 
bility of such a representation. But I do not see my way 
to it; and those who have been more confident have not 
been more successful. However, the arm of public be- 
nevolence is not shortened, and there are often several 
means to the same end. What Nature has disjoined in 
one way, Wisdom may unite in another. When we can 
not give the benefit as we would wish, let us not re- 
fuse it altogether. If we can not give the principal, 
let us find a substitute. But how? Where? What 
substitute? 

Fortunately I am not obliged for the ways and means 
of this substitute to tax my own unproductive invention. 
I am not even obliged to go to the rich treasury of the 
fertile framers of imaginary commonwealths; not to the 
Republic of Plato; 18 not to the Utopia of More; not to 
the Oceana of Harrington. It is before me; it is at 
my feet — 



" and the rude swain 
Treads daily on it with his clouted shoon." 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 4 3 

I only wish you to recognize, for the theory, the ancient 
Constitutional policy of this kingdom with regard to rep- 
resentation, as that policy has hecn declared in acts of 
Parliament; and as to the practice, to return to that mode 
which a uniform experience has marked out to you as 
best, and in which you walked with security, advantage, 
and honor, until the year 1763. 19 

My resolutions therefore mean to establish the equity 
and justice of a taxation of America by grant, and not by 
imposition; 2 ® to mark the legal competency of the colony 
assemblies for the support of their government in peace, 
and for public aids in time of war; to acknowledge that 
this legal competency has had a dutiful and beneficial 
exercise; and that experience has shown the benefit of 
their grants and the futility of parliamentary taxation as 
a method of supply. 

Let it also be considered that, either in the present 
confusion you settle a permanent contingent which will 
and must be trifling, and then you have no effectual 
revenue; or you change the quota at every exigency, 
and then on every new repartition you will have a new 
quarrel. 

Reflect, besides, that when you have fixed a quota for 
every colony, you have not provided for prompt and punc- 
tual payment. Suppose one, two, five, ten years' arrears. 
You can not issue a treasury extent against the failing 
colony. You must make new Boston Port Bills, new re- 
straining laws, new acts for dragging men to England for 
trial. You must send out new fleets, new armies. All 
is to begin again. From this day forward the Empire is 
never to know r an hour's tranquillity. An intestine fire 
will be kept alive in the bowels of the colonies, which one 
time or other must consume this whole Empire. I allow 
indeed that the empire of Germany raises her revenue 
and her troops by quotas and contingents ; but the revenue 



44 EDMUND BURKE 

of the empire, and the army of the empire, is the worst 
revenue and the worst army in the world. 

Instead of a standing revenue, you will therefore have 
a perpetual quarrel. Indeed, the noble lord who pro- 
posed this project of a ransom by auction seems himself 
to be of that opinion. His project was rather designed 
for breaking the union of the colonies than for establish- 
ing a revenue. He confessed he apprehended that his 
proposal would not be to their taste. I say this scheme 
of disunion seems to be at the bottom of the project; for 
I will not suspect that the noble lord meant nothing but 
merely to delude the nation by an airy phantom which 
he never intended to realize. But whatever his views 
may be, as I propose the peace and union of the colonies 
as the very foundation of my plan, it cannot accord with 
one whose foundation is perpetual discord. 

Compare the two. This I offer to give you is plain 
and simple. The other full of perplexed and intricate 
mazes. This mild; that harsh. This is found by ex- 
perience effectual for its purposes; the other is a new 
project. This is universal; the other calculated for cer- 
tain colonies only. This is immediate in its conciliatory 
operations; the other remote, contingent, full of hazard. 
Mine is what becomes the dignity of a ruling people — 
gratuitous, unconditional, and not held out as a matter of 
bargain and sale. I have done my duty in proposing it 
to you. I have indeed tired you by a long discourse; 
but this is the misfortune of those to whose influence 
nothing will be conceded, and who must win every inch 
of their ground by argument. You have heard me with 
goodness. May you decide with wisdom! For my part, 
I feel my mind greatly disburthened by what I have 
done to-day. I have been the less fearful of trying your 
patience, because on this subject I mean to spare it alto- 
gether in future. I have this comfort, that in every stage 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 4 S 

of the Amercan affairs I have steadily opposed the meas- 
ures that have produced the confusion, and may bring on 
the destruction, of this Empire. I now go so far as to 
risk a proposal of my own. If I cannot give peace to 
my country, I give it to my conscience. 

But what, says the financier, is peace to us without 
money? Your plan gives us no revenue. No! But it 
does; for it secures to the subject the power of refusal, 
the first of all revenues. Experience is a cheat, and tact 
a liar, if this power in the subject of proportioning his 
grant, or of not granting at all, has not been found the 
richest mine of revenue ever discovered by the skill or 
by the fortune of man. It does not indeed vote you 
152,750/. H5". 2}id.j nor any other paltry limited sum; 
but it gives the strong box itself, the fund, the bank — 
from whence only revenues can arise amongst a people 
sensible to freedom. Posita luditur area. 21 Cannot you, 
in England — cannot you, at this time of day — cannot you, 
a House of Commons, trust to the principle which has 
raised so mighty a revenue, and accumulated a debt of 
near 140,000,000 in this country? Is this principle to 
be true in England, and false ^everywhere else ? Is it not 
true in Ireland? Has it not hitherto been true in trie 
colonies? Why should you presume that in any country 
a body duly constituted for any function will neglect to 
perform its dnty, and abdicate its trust? Such a pre- 
sumption would go against all governments in all modes. 
But, in truth, this dread of penury of supply, from a free 
assembly, has no foundation in Nature. For first ob- 
serve, that, besides the desire which all men have natu- 
rally of supporting the honor of their own government, 
that sense of dignity, and that security to property, which 
ever attends freedom, has a tendency to increase the stock 
of the free community. Most may be taken where most is 
accumulated. And what is the soil or climate where ex- 



46 EDMUND BURKE 

perience has no uniformly proved that the voluntary flow 
of heaped-up plenty, bursting from the weight of its own 
rich luxuriance, has ever run with a more copious stream 
of revenue than could be squeezed from the dry husks of 
oppressed indigence by the straining of all the politic ma- 
chinery in the world? 

Next, we know that parties must ever exist in a free 
country. We know, too, that the emulations of such 
parties, their contradictions, their reciprocal necessities, 
their hopes, and their fears, must send them all in their 
turns to him that holds the balance of the State. The 
parties are the gamesters; but the government keeps the 
table, and is sure to be the winner in the end. When this 
game is played, I really think it is more to be feared that 
the people will be exhausted, than that government will 
not be supplied. Whereas, whatever is got by acts ot 
absolute power, ill obeyed, because odious, or by contracts, 
ill kept, because constrained, will be narrow- feeble, un- 
certain, and precarious. 

" Ease would retract vows made in pain, as violent and 
void/' 

I, for one, protest against compounding our Remands. 
I declare against compounding, for a poor limited sum, 
the immense, ever-growing, eternal debt which is due to 
generous government from protected freedom. And so 
may I speed in the great object I propose to you, as I 
think it would not only be an act of injustice, but would 
be the worst economy in the world, to compel the colonies 
to a sum certain, either in the way of ransom or in the 
way of compulsory compact. 

But to clear up my ideas on this subject: a revenue 
from America transmitted hither — do not delude your- 
selves — you never can receive it; no, not a shilling. We 
have experience that from remote countries it is not to 
be expected. If, when you attempted to extract revenue 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 47 

from Bengal, you were obliged to return in loan what 
you had taken in imposition, what can you expect from 
North America? For certainly, if ever there was a 
country qualified to produce wealth, it is India; or an 
institution fit for the transmission, it is the East India 
Company. America has none of these aptitudes. If 
America gives you taxable objects on which you lay your 
duties here, and gives you, at the same time, a surplus 
by a foreign sale of her commodities to pay the duties on 
these objects which you tax at home, she has performed 
her part to the British revenue. But with regard to her 
own internal establishments, she may, I doubt not she 
will, contribute in moderation. I say in moderation, for 
she ought not to be permitted to exhaust herself. She 
ought to be reserved to a war, the weight of which, with 
the enemies that we are most likely to have, must be 
considerable in her quarter of the globe. There she may 
serve you, and serve you essentially. 

For that service — for all service, whether of revenue, 
trade, or empire — my trust is in her interest in the British 
Constitution. My hold of the colonies is in the close 
affection which grows from common names, from kindred 
blood, from similar privileges, and equal protection. 
These are ties which, though light as air, are as strong as 
links of iron. Let the colonies always keep the idea of 
their civil rights associated with your government; they 
will cling and grapple to you, and no force under heaven 
will be of power to tear them from their allegiance. But 
let it be onc.e understood that your government may be 
one thing and their privileges another; that these two 
things may exist without anv mutual relation ; the cement 
is gone, the cohesion is loosened, and everything hastens to 
decay and dissolution. As long as you have the wisdom 
to keep the sovereign authority of this country as the sanc- 
tuary of liberty, the sacred temple consecrated to our 



48 EDMUND BURKE 

common faith, wherever the chosen race and sons of Eng- 
land worship freedom, they will turn their faces towards 
you. The more they multiply, the more friends you will 
have ; the more ardently they love liberty, the more perfect 
will be their obedience. Slavery they can have anywhere. 
It is a weed that grows in every soil. They may have it 
from Spain, they may have it from Prussia. But, until 
you become lost to all feeling of your true interest and 
your natural dignity, freedom they can have from none 
but you. This is the commodity of price, of which you 
have the monopoly. This is the true Act of Navigation 
which binds to you the commerce of the colonies, and 
through them secures to you the wealth of the world. 
Deny them this participation of freedom, and you break 
that sole b<?nd which originally made and must still pre- 
serve the unity of the empire. Do not entertain so weak 
an imagination as that your registers and your bond?, 
your affidavits and your sufferances, your cockets and your 
clearances are what form the great securities of your com- 
merce. Do not dream that your letters of office, and 
your instructions, and your suspending clauses, are the 
things that hold together the great contexture of the mys- 
terious whole. These things do not make your govern- 
ment. Dead instruments, passive tools as they are, it fs 
the spirit of the English communion that gives all thefr 
life and efficacy to them. It is the spirit of the Eng- 
lish Constitution which, infused through the mighty 
mass, pervades, feeds, unites, invigorates, vivifies every 
part of the Empire, even down to the minutest mem- 
ber. 

Is it not the same virtue which does everything for us 
here in England? Do you imagine, then, that it is the 
Land Tax Act which raises your revenue? that it is the 
annual vote in the Committee of Supply which gives you 
your army? or that it is the Mutiny Bill which inspires 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 49 

it with bravery and discipline? No! surely no! It is 
the love of the people; it is their attachment to their gov- 
ernment, from the sense of the deep stake they have in 
such a glorious institution, which gives you your army 
and your navy, and infuses into both that liberal obedience 
without which your army would be a base rabble, and 
your navy nothing but rotten timber. 

All this, I know well enough, will sound wild and 
chimerical to the profane herd of those vulgar and me- 
chanical politicians who have no place among us; a sort 
of people who think that nothing exists but what is gross 
and material, and who, therefore, far from being qualified 
to be directors of the great movement of empire, are not 
fit to turn a wheel in the machine. But to men truly 
initiated and rightly taught, these ruling and master prin- 
ciples, which, in the opinion of such men as I have men- 
tioned, have no substantial existence, are in truth every- 
thing, and all in all. Magnanimity in politics is not 
seldom the truest wisdom; and a great empire and little 
minds go ill together. If we are conscious of our station, 
and glow with zeal to fill our places as becomes our situ- 
ation and ourselves, we ought to auspicate all our public 
proceedings on America with the old warning of the 
church, Sursum corda! 22 We ought to elevate our minds 
to the greatness of that trust to which the order of Provi- 
dence has called us. By adverting to the dignity of this 
high calling, our ancestors have turned a savage wilder- 
ness into a glorious empire; and have made the most ex- 
tensive, and the only honorable conquests, not by destroy- 
ing, but by promoting the wealth, the number, the happi- 
ness of the human race. Let us get an American revenue 
as we have got an American empire. English privileges 
have made it all that it is; English privileges alone will 
make it all it can be. 

In full confidence of this unalterable truth, I now 



50 EDMUND BURKE 

{quod felix jaustumque sit) 23 lay the first stone of the 
Temple of Peace; and I move you — 

Moved, 

That the colonies and plantations of Great Britain in North 
America, consisting of fourteen separate governments, and con- 
taining two millions and upwards of free inhabitants, have not 
had the liberty and privilege of electing and sending any knights 
and burgesses, or others, to represent them in the high court of 
Parliament. 

That the said colonies and plantations have been liable to, 
and bounden by, several subsidies, payments, rates and taxes, 
given and granted by Parliament, though the said colonies and 
plantations have not their knights and burgesses in the said high 
court of Parliament, of their own election, to represent the con- 
dition of their country; by lack whereof they have been often- 
times touched and grieved by subsidies given, granted and as- 
sented to, in the said court, in a manner prejudicial to the com- 
monwealth, quietness, rest and peace of the subjects inhabiting 
within the same. 

That, from the distance of the said colonies and from other 
circumstances, no method hath hitherto been devised for pro- 
curing a representation in Parliament for the said colonies. 

That each of the said colonies hath within itself a body, 
chosen in part or in the whole by the freemen, freeholders or 
other free inhabitants thereof, commonly called the general as- 
sembly, or general court; with powers legally to raise, levy and 
assess, according to the several usages of such colonies, duties 
and taxes towards defraying all sorts of public services. 

That the said general assemblies, general courts, or other 
bodies legally qualified as aforesaid, have at sundry times 
freely granted several large subsidies and public aids for his 
Majesty's service, according to their abilities, when required 
thereto by letter from one of his Majesty's principal secretaries 
of state; and that their right to grant the same and their cheer- 
fulness and sufficiency in the said grants have been at sundry 
times acknowledged by Parliament. 

That it hath been found by experience that the manner of 
granting the said supplies and aids by the said general assem- 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 51 

blies hath been more agreeable to the said colonies, and more 
beneficial and conducive to the public service, than the mode of 
giving and granting aids in Parliament, to be raised and paid 
in the said colonies. 

That it may be proper to repeal an act made in the seventh 
year of the reign of his present Majesty, entitled, " An act for 
granting certain duties in the British colonies and plantations in 
America; for allowing a drawback of the duties of customs 
upon the exportation from this kingdom, of coffee and cocoanuts 
of the produce of the said colonies or plantations; for discon- 
tinuing the drawbacks payable on China earthenware exported 
to America; and for more effectually preventing the clandestine 
running of goods in the said colonies and plantations." 

That it may be proper to repeal an act made in the four- 
teenth year of the reign of his present Majesty, entitled, " An act 
to discontinue, in such manner and for such time as are therein 
mentioned, the landing and discharging, lading or shipping, of 
goods, wares and merchandise, at the town and within the har- 
bor of Boston, in the province of Massachusetts Bay, in North 
America." 

That it may be proper to repeal an act made in the four- 
teenth year of the reign of his present Majesty, entitled, " An act 
for the impartial administration of justice in the cases of per- 
sons questioned for any acts done by them in the execution of the 
law, or for the suppression of riots and tumults, in the province 
of Massachusetts Bay, in New England." 

That it may be proper to repeal an act made in the four- 
teenth year of the reign of his present Majesty, entitled, " An act 
for the impartial administration of justice in the cases of per- 
sons questioned for any acts done by them in the execution of the 
law, or for the suppression of riots and tumults, in the province 
of Massachusetts Bay, in New England." 

That it may be proper to repeal an act made in the four- 
teenth year of the reign of his present Majesty, entitled, " An act 
for the better regulating the government of the province of 
shall wear a new luster"? 

That it may be proper to explain and amend an act made in 
the thirty-fifth year of the reign of King Henry the Eighth, 



52 EDMUND BURKE 

entitled " An act for the trial of treasons committed out of the 
king's dominions." 

That from the time when the general assembly, or general 
court, of any colony or plantation in North America shall have 
appointed by act of assembly duly confirmed, a settled salary to 
the offices of the chief justice and other judges of the superior 
court, it may be proper that the said chief justice and other 
judges of the superior courts of such colony shall hold his and 
their office and offices during their good behavior, and shall not 
be removed therefrom but when the said removal shall be ad- 
judged by his Majesty in council, upon a hearing on complaint 
from the general assembly, or on a complaint from the governor 
or council or the house of representatives severally, of the colony 
in which the said chief justice and other judges have exercised 
the said offices. 

That it may be proper to regulate the courts of admiralty or 
vice-admiralty authorized by the fifteenth chapter of the fourth 
of George the Third, in such a manner as to make the same 
more commodious to those who sue and are sued in the said 
courts; and to provide for the more decent maintenance of the 
judges in the same. 

Why was the British government so determined to assert its 
right to tax America? 

What was Lord North's plan and why was it not suitable as 
a remedy? 

State briefly the substance of Burke's conciliatory resolutions. 

Chatham, Wilkes, and Burke each considered the American 
question one of the most important that had been brought before 
the House of Commons. How do they seem to differ regarding 
the reason for its importance? 

If Burke's plan had been followed, what would probably 
have been the effect on the history of the British Empire? 

How do you think the history of America would have been 
influenced if Burke's plan had been followed? 

By what means did Burke hope to infuse the colonies with a 
patriotic love for English institutions and the empire? 

Was any part of Burke's plan introduced into later colonial 
policy? 

Discuss the accuracy of Burke's estimate of colonial character. 

What democratic principle, advocated by Burke in this speech, 



CONCILIATION WITH AMERICA 53 

has since his time become commonly accepted as a characteristic 
of just and sound government? 

How does Burke's style differ from that of Otis, Chatham, 
and Wilkes? 

What are the persuasive advantages and disadvantages of 
such a style? 

Would Burke's oratorical style be more or less acceptable in 
our day than it was in 1775? Why? 

Comment briefly on Burke's emphasis on causes and results. 

Enumerate the various motives to which Burke appealed. 

Point out instances where Burke's diction is a source of per- 
suasive power. 

Knowing what you do of the audience and Burke's speech, 
how do you account for the fact that the House of Commons 
rejected his plan by a vote of 270 to 78? 



LIBERTY OR DEATH 

March 23, 1775 

On March 23, 1775, the old church at Richmond, Va. 
was crowded to the doors by the Convention of Dele- 
gates. George Washington and other prominent men 
were there in the audience. Five days previously, 
Henry had spoken of war with England as inevitable, 
and had introduced resolutions for defense. Many of 
the ablest men in the colonies considered this action 
premature. Many conceded that war was possible, even 
probable; but no one had ventured to declare it 
unavoidable. Feeling against the Mother Country was 
running decidedly high, and when Henry had concluded 
his " individual declaration of war against Great 
Britain," the Convention of Delegates was a new 
body. " To arms," seemed to quiver on every lip ; 
their souls were on fire for action. Tyler says, " Henry 
rose with an unearthly fire burning in his eye. He 
commenced somewhat calmly, but the smothered ex- 
citement began more and more to play upon his fea- 
tures and thrill in the tones of his voice. The tendons 
of his neck stood out white and rigid like whipcords. 
His voice rose louder and louder, until the walls of 
the building, and all within them seemed to shake and 
rock in its tremendous vibrations. Finally his pale 
face and glaring eyes became terrible to look upon. 
Men leaned forward in their seats, with their heads 
strained forward, their faces pale, and their eyes 
glaring like the speaker's. His last exclamation, 
' Give me liberty or give me death ! ' was like the 
shout of the leader which turns the rout of battle." 

54 



LIBERTY OR DEATH 55 

LIBERTY OR DEATH 

Patrick Henry 

No man thinks more highly than I do of the patriotism, 
as well as abilities, of the very worthy gentlemen who 
have just addressed the House. But different men often 
see the same subject in different lights; and, therefore, 
I hope it will not be thought disrespectful to those 
gentlemen, if, entertaining as I do opinions of a char- 
acter very opposite to theirs> I shall speak forth my senti- 
ments freely and without reserve. This is no time for 
ceremony. 

The question before the House is one of awful moment 
to this country. For my own part, I consider it as noth- 
ing less than a question of freedom or slavery; and in 
proportion to the magnitude of the subject ought to be 
the freedom of the debate. It is only in this way that we 
can hope to arrive at truth, and fulfil the great responsi- 
bility which we hold to God and our country. Should 
I keep back my opinions at such a time, through fear of 
giving offense, I should consider myself as guilty of trea- 
son toward my country, and of an act of disloyalty toward 
the Majesty of Heaven, which I revere above all earthly 
kings. 

Mr. President, it is natural to man to indulge in the 
illusions of hope. We are apt to shut our eyes against a 
painful truth, and listen to the song of that siren, till she 
transforms us into beasts. Is this the part of wise men, 
engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? Are 
we disposed to be of the number of those, who, having 
eyes, see not, and having ears, hear not, the things which 
so nearly concern their temporal salvation? For my part, 
whatever anguish of spirit it may cost, I am willing to 



56 PATRICK HENRY 

know the whole truth ; to know the worst, and to provide 
for it. 

I have but one lamp by which my feet are guided ; and 
that is the lamp of experience. I know of no way of 
judging of the future but by the past. And judging by 
the past, I wish to know what there has been in the con- 
duct of the British ministry, for the last ten years, to 
justify those hopes w T ith which gentlemen have been 
pleased to solace themselves and the House? Is it that 
insidious smile 1 with which our petition has been lately 
received ? Trust it not, sir ; it will prove a snare to your 
feet. Suffer not yourself to be betrayed with a kiss. Ask 
yourselves how this gracious reception of our petition 
comports with those warlike preparations which cover 
our waters and darken our land. Are fleets and armies 
necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? Have we 
shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force 
must be called in to win back our love? Let us not 
deceive ourselves, sir. These are the implements of war 
and subjugation; the last arguments to which kings 
resort. 

I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if 
its purpose be not to force us to submission ? Can gentle- 
men assign any other possible motive for it. Has Great 
Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world to call for 
all this accumulation of navies and armies? No, sir, she 
has none. They are meant for us; they can be meant for 
no other. They are sent over to bind and rivet upon us 
those chains, which the British ministry have been so long 
forging. And what have we to oppose to them? Shall 
we try argument? Sir, we have been trying that for the 
last ten years. Have we anything new to offer upon the 
subject? Nothing. We have held the subject up in every 
light of which it is capable; but it has been all in vain. 
Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? 



LIBERTY OR DEATH 57 

What terms shall we find, which have not been already 
exhausted? Let us not. I beseech you, sir, deceive our- 
selves longer. Sir, we have done everything that could 
be done to avert the storm which is now coming on. We 
have petitioned ; we have remonstrated ; we have suppli- 
cated ; we have prostrated ourselves before the throne, 
and have implored its interposition to arrest the tyran- 
nical hands of the ministry and Parliament. Our peti- 
tions have been slighted ; our remonstrances have produced 
additional violence and insult; our supplications have 
been disregarded ; and we have been spurned, with con- 
tempt, from the foot of the throne! In vain, after these 
things, may we indulge the fond hope of peace and recon- 
ciliation. There is no longer any room for hope. If we 
wish to be free — if we mean .to preserve inviolate those 
inestimable privileges for which we have been so long 
contending — if we mean not basely to abandon the noble 
struggle in which we have been so long engaged, and 
which we have pledged ourselves never to abandon, until 
the glorious object of our contest shall be obtained — we 
must fight! I repeat it, sir, we must fight! An appeal 
to arms and to the God of Hosts is all that is left us! 

They tell us, sir, that we are weak — unable to cope 
with so formidable an adversary. But when shall we be 
stronger? Will it be the next week, or the next year? 
Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when i 
British guard shall be stationed in every house? Shall 
we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? Shall 
we acquire the means of effectual resistance by lying 
supinely on our backs and hugging the delusive phantom 
of hope, until our enemies shall have bound us hand and 
foot? 

Sir, we are not weak if we make a proper use of those 
means which the God of nature has placed in our power. 
Three millions of people armed in the holy cause of 



58 PATRICK HENRY 

liberty, and in such a country as that which we possess, 
are invincible by any force which our enemy can send 
against us. Besides, sir, we shall not fight our battles 
alone. There is a just God who presides over the destinies 
of nations, and who will raise up friends to fight our 
battles for us. The battle, sir, is not to the strong alone; 
it is to the vigilant, the active, the brave. Besides, sir, 
we have no election. If we were base enough to desire it, 
it is now too late to retire from the contest. There is no 
retreat but in submission and slavery! Our chains are 
forged! Their clanking may be heard on the plains of 
Boston! The war is inevitable — and let it come! I 
repeat it, sir, let it come! 

It is in vain, sir, to extenuate the matter. Gentlemen 
may cry " Peace, peace " — but there is no peace. The 
war is actually begun! The next gale that sweeps from 
the north will bring to our ears the clash of resounding 
arms ! Our brethren are already in the field ! Why 
stand we here idle? What is it that gentlemen wish? 
What would they have? Is life so dear, or peace so 
sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and 
slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what 
course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty 
or give me death! 

To what land did Henry refer when in the second paragraph 
he spoke of treason to his country? 

Does Henry offer sound arguments for immediate action? 

Had the injustice of the British government materially af- 
fected living conditions in America? 

Does Henry anywhere appeal to the ambitions of his hearers 
or hold before them financial or material arguments for inde- 
pendence? 

Discuss the persuasive value of Henry's offering to stand alone 
unto death, if need be, rather than submit. Refer to other 
instances in history or literature of similar emotional appeal. 

Point out the many biblical phrases and comment on their 
persuasive value. 



LIBERTY OR DEATH 59 

To what motives and emotions did Henry address his appeal? 

As compared with Otis, is his speech chiefly argumentative 
or persuasive ? 

Is the current popularity of this speech due chiefly to its 
literary value, to its historical associations, or to its apprecia- 
tion of liberty? 



WEBSTER'S FIRST BUNKER HILL ADDRESS 

June 17, 1825 

There came to the United States of America in 181 5 
a remarkable period of peace and prosperity. The 
War for Independence had been carried to a success- 
ful conclusion and the thirteen original states under 
enlarged Federal authority had been drawn into a 
well-organized union. Minor difficulties with France 
or England had been removed through war or diplo- 
macy. At this happy time, state after state was added 
to the Union. In territory, in population, in wealth, 
in education, unexampled progress was made. It was 
a period when undisturbed by rumors of war, for the 
anti-slavery contest had not yet become critical, Amer- 
icans turned again at their leisure, as in the colonial 
days, to consider the fundamental principles of gov- 
ernment and sought to shape anew their expanding 
political ideals. 

It was fitting, therefore, that when a vast assem- 
blage of Americans met at Bunker Hill on June 17, 
1825, to lay the corner stone of a monument com- 
memorating the heroic deeds of the men of 1776, that 
Daniel Webster, the orator of the day, should use the 
occasion to inspire his countrymen with the spirit of 
true patriotism. He reminded his hearers of the power 
of public opinion to make right supreme over might, 
and he urged them to emulate the example of their 
forefathers, that the young and growing nation — " the 

60 



BUNKER HILL ADDRESS 61 

last hope of mankind " — might have a bencficient effect 
on the progress of the world. 

This oration is the finest example of commemorative 
address, ancient or modern, that the world has seen. 
It was not a speech, that in a dramatic crisis moved 
men to perform an act or make a decision that would 
turn the course of history to a new direction; but not 
on that account should its influence be belittled. It 
helped to shape American ideals. It formulated and 
made dynamic the first fifty years of American history, 
and recorded for all time some of the dearly-purchased 
principles of democracy. 

The occasion in itself was most impressive. It 
was a mild June morning. Rain the previous day 
had brought to trees and grass their brightest green. 
Overhead was a sky almost cloudless ; and in the dis- 
tance shimmered the blue harbor, the scene of the 
Boston Tea Party. The great audience was gathered 
on the very eminence where the Battle of Bunker 
Hill had been fought. At the left w*as marked the 
spot where Warren fell. On the platform beside 
Webster was Lafayette, most beloved among the dis- 
tinguished foreigners who had come to America dur- 
ing the Revolution to serve in the cause of freedom. 
Nearby were forty survivors of the battle, some of 
them dressed in their old uniforms — men who were 
now aged and feeble. 

When the orator arose to speak the vast assemblage 
was silent with reverent attention. Never was occa- 
sion more fit for a great commemorative address. 



62 DANIEL WEBSTER 



ORATION ON THE LAYING OF THE COR- 
NERSTONE OF THE BUNKER HILL 
MONUMENT 

t 

Daniel Webster 

This uncounted multitude before me and around me 
proves the feeling which the occasion has excited. These 
thousands of human faces, glowing with sympathy and 
joy, and from the impulses of a common gratitude turned 
reverently to heaven in this spacious temple of the firma- 
ment, proclaim that the day, the place, and the purpose 
of our assembling have made a deep impression on our 
hearts. 

If, indeed, there be anything in local association fit 
to affect the mind of man, we need not strive to repress 
the emotions which agitate us here. We are among the 
sepulchres of our fathers. We are on ground, distin- 
guished by their valor, their constancy, and the shedding 
of their blood. We are here, not to fix an uncertain date 
in our annals, nor draw into notice an obscure and un- 
known spot. If our humble purpose had never been con- 
ceived, if we ourselves had never been born, the 17th of 
June, 1775, would have been a day on which all subse- 
quent history would have poured its light, and the emi- 
nence where we stand a point of attraction to the eyes 
of successive generations. But we are Americans. We 
live in what may be called the early age of this great 
Continent; and we know that our posterity, through all 
time, are here to enjoy and suffer the allotments of hu- 
manity. We see before, us a probable train of great 
events ; we know that our own fortunes have been happily 
cast; and it is natural, therefore, that we should be moved 
by the contemplation of occurrences which have guided 



BUNKER HILL ADDRESS 63 

our destiny before many of us were horn, and settled the 
condition in which we should pass that portion of our 
existence which God allows to men on earth. 

We do not read even of the discovery of this continent, 
without feeling something of a personal interest in the 
event; without being reminded how much it has affected 
our own fortunes and our own existence. It would be 
still more unnatural for us, therefore, than for others, to 
contemplate with unaffected minds that interesting, I may 
say that most touching and pathetic scene, when the great 
discoverer of America stood on the deck of his shattered 
bark, the shades of night falling on the sea, yet no man 
sleeping; tossed on the billows of an unknown ocean, yet 
the stronger billows of alternate hope and despair tossing 
his own troubled thoughts; extending forward his 
harassed frame, straining westward his anxious and eager 
eyes, till Heaven at last granted him a moment of rapture 
and ecstacy, in blessing his vision with the sight of the 
unknown world. 

Nearer to our times, more closely connected with our 
fates, and therefore still more interesting to our feelings 
and affections, is the settlement of our own country by 
colonists from England. We cherish every memorial of 
these worthy ancestors; we celebrate their patience and 
fortitude; we admire their daring enterprise; we teach 
our children to venerate their piety; and we are justly 
proud of being descended from men who have set the 
world an example of founding civil institutions on the 
great and united principles of human freedom and human 
knowledge. To us, their children, the story of their 
labors and sufferings can never be without its interest. 
We shall not stand unmoved on the shore of Plymouth, 
while the sea continues to wash it; nor will our brethren 
in another early and ancient colony 1 forget the place of 
its first establishment, till their river shall cease to flow 



64 DANIEL WEBSTER 

by it. No vigor of youth, no maturity of manhood, will 
lead the nation to forget the spots where its infancy was 
cradled and defended. 

But the great event in the history of the continent, 
which we are now met here to commemorate, that prodigy 
of modern times, at once the wonder and the blessing of 
the world, is the American Revolution. In a day of 
extraordinary prosperity and happiness, of high national 
honor, distinction, and power, we are brought together 
in this place by our love of country, by our admiration 
of exalted character, by our gratitude for signal services 
and patriotic devotion. 

The Society whose organ I am 2 was formed for the 
purpose of rearing some honorable and durable monu- 
ment to the memory of the early friends of American 
Independence. They have thought, that for this object 
no time could be more propitious than the present pros- 
perous and peaceful period; that no place could claim 
preference over this memorable spot; and that no day 
could be more auspicious to the undertaking, than the 
anniversary of the battle which was here fought. The 
foundation of that monument 3 we have now laid. With 
solemnities suited to the occasion, with prayers to Al- 
mighty God for His blessing, and in the midst of this 
cloud of witnesses, we have begun the work. We trust 
it will be prosecuted, and that, springing from a broad 
foundation, rising high in massive solidity and unadorned 
grandeur, it may remain as long as Heaven permits the 
works of man to last, a fit emblem, both of the events in 
memory of which it is raised, and of the gratitude of those 
who have reared it. 

We know, indeed, that the record of illustrious actions 
is most safely deposited in the universal remembrance of 
mankind. We know, that if we could cause this structure 
to ascend, not only till it reached the skies, but till it 



BUNKER HILL ADDRESS 65 

pierced them, its broad surfaces could still contain but 
part of that which, in an age of knowledge, hath already 
been spread over the earth, and which history charges 
itself with making known to all future times. We know 
that no inscription on entablatures less broad than the 
earth itself can carry information of the events we com- 
memorate where it has not already gone ; and that no 
structure, which shall not outlive the duration of letters 
and knowledge among men, can prolong the memorial. 
But our object is, by this edifice, to show our own deep 
sense of the value and importance of the achievements of 
our ancestors ; and, by presenting this work of gratitude 
to the eye, to keep alive similar sentiments, and to foster 
a constant regard for the principles of the Revolution. 
Human beings are composed, not of reason only, but of 
imagination also, and sentiment; and that is neither 
wasted nor misapplied which is appropriated to the pur- 
pose of giving right direction to sentiments, and opening 
proper springs of feeling in the heart. Let it not be sup- 
posed that our object is to perpetuate national hostility, 
or even to cherish a mere military spirit. It is higher, 
purer, nobler. We consecrate our work to the spirit of 
national independence, and we wish that the light of 
peace may rest upon it forever. We rear a memorial of 
our conviction of that unmeasured benefit which has been 
conferred on our land, and of the happy influences which 
have been produced, by the same events, on the general 
interests of mankind. We come, as Americans, to mark 
a spot which must forever be dear to us and our posterity. 
We wish that whosoever, in all coming time, shall turn 
his eye hither, may behold that the place is not indis- 
tinguished where the first great battle of the Revolution 
was fought. We wish that this structure may proclaim 
the magnitude and importance of that event to every class 
and even- age. We wish that infancy may learn the 



66 DANIEL WEBSTER 

purpose of its erection from maternal lips, and that weary 
and withered age may behold it, and be solaced by the 
recollections which it suggests. We wish that labor may 
look up here, and be proud, in the midst of its toil. We 
wish that, in those days of disaster, which, as they come 
upon all nations, must be expected to come upon us also, 
desponding patriotism may turn its eyes hitherward, and 
be assured that the foundations of our national power are 
still strong. We wish that this column, rising toward 
heaven among the pointed spires of so many temples dedi- 
cated to God, may contribute also to produce in all minds, 
a pious feeling of dependence and gratitude. We wish, 
finally, that the last object to the sight of him who leaves 
his native shore, and the first to gladden his who revisits 
it, may be something which shall remind him of the lib- 
erty and the glory of his country. Let it rise! let it rise, 
till it meet the sun in his coming ; let the earliest light of 
the morning gild it, and parting day linger and play on its 
summit. 

We still have among us some of those who were active 
agents in the scenes of 1775, and w T ho are now here from 
every quarter of New England, to visit once more, and 
under circumstances so affecting, I had almost said so 
overwhelming, this renowned theatre of their courage and 
patriotism. 

Venerable men ! 4 you have come down to us from a 
former generation. Heaven has bounteously lengthened 
out your lives, that you might behold this joyous day. 
You are now where you stood fifty years ago, this very 
hour, with your brothers and your neighbors, shoulder 
to shoulder, in the strife for jxrnr country. Behold, how 
altered ! The same heavens are indeed over our heads ; the 
same ocean rolls at your feet ; but all else how changed ! 
You hear now no roar of hostile cannon, you see no mixed 
volumes of smoke and flame rising from burning Charles- 



BUNKER HILL ADDRESS 67 

town. The ground strewed with the dead and dying; 
the impetuous charge ; the Steady and successful repulse ; 
the loud call to repeated assault ; the summoning of all 
that is manly to repeated resistance; a thousand bosoms 
freely and fearlessly bared in an instant to whatever of 
terror there may be in war and death ; — all these you 
have witnessed, but you witness them no more. All is 
peace. The heights of yonder metropolis, its towers and 
roofs, which you then saw filled with wives and children 
and countrymen in distress and terror, and looking with 
unutterable emotions for the issue of the combat, have 
presented you to-day w T ith the sight of its whole happy 
population, come out to w T elcome and greet you with a 
universal jubilee. Yonder proud ships, by a felicity of 
position appropriately lying at the foot of this mount, and 
seeming fondly to cling around it, are not means of an- 
noyance to you, but your country's own means of distinc- 
tion and defense. All is peace; and God has granted you 
this sight of your country's happiness, ere you slumber in 
the grave. He has allowed you to behold and to partake 
the reward of your patriotic toils; and He has allowed 
us, your sons and countrymen, to meet you here, and in 
the name of the present generation, in the name of your 
country, in the name of liberty, to thank you! 

The Battle of Bunker Hill was attended with the most 
important effects beyond its immediate results as a mili- 
tary engagement. It created at once a state of open, 
public war. There could now be no longer a question of 
proceeding against individuals, as guilty of treason or 
rebellion. That fearful crisis was past. The appeal lay 
to the sword, and the only question was, whether the 
spirit and the resources of the people would hold out till 
the object should be accomplished. Nor w T ere its general 
consequences confined to our own country. The previous 
proceedings of the colonies, their appeals, resolutions, and 



68 DANIEL WEBSTER 

addresses, had made their cause known to Europe. With- 
out boasting, we may say, that in no age or country has 
the public cause been maintained with more force of 
argument, more power of illustration, or more of that 
persuasion which excited -feeling and elevated principle 
can alone bestow, than the Revolutionary state papers 
exhibit. These papers will forever deserve to be studied 
not only for the spirit which they breathe, but for the 
ability with which they were written. 

To this able vindication of their cause, the colonies 
had now added a practical and severe proof of their own 
true devotion to it, and given evidence also of the power 
which they could bring to its support. All now saw, that 
if America fell, she would not fall without a struggle. 
Men felt sympathy and regard, as well as surprise, when 
they beheld these infant states, remote, unknown, unaided, 
encounter the power of England, and, in the first con- 
siderable battle, leave more of their enemies dead on 
the field, in proportion to the number of combatants, 
than had been recently known to fall in the wars of 
Europe. 

Information of these events, circulating throughout the 
world, at length reached the ears of one who now hears 
me. 5 He has not forgotten the emotion which the fame 
of Bunker Hill, and the name of Warren, excited in his 
youthful breast. 

Sir, we are assembled to commemorate the establish- 
ment of great public principles of liberty, and to do honor 
to the distinguished dead. The occasion is too severe for 
eulogy of the living. But, Sir, your interesting relation 
to this country, the peculiar circumstances which sur- 
round you and surround us, call on me to express the 
happiness which we derive from your presence and aid in 
this solemn commemoration. 

Fortunate, fortunate man! With what measure of 



BUNKER HILL ADDRESS 69 

devotion will you not thank God for the circumstances 
of your extraordinary life! You are connected with both 
hemispheres and with two generations. Heaven saw fit 
to ordain, that the electric spark of liberty should be con- 
ducted, through you, from the New World to the Old ; 
and we, who are now here to perform this duty of pa- 
triotism, have all of us long ago received it in charge 
from our fathers to cherish your name and your virtues. 
You will account it an instance of your good fortune, Sir, 
that you crossed the seas to visit us at a time which 
enables you to be present at this solemnity. You now 
behold the field, the renown of which reached you in the 
heart of France, and caused a thrill in your ardent bosom. 
You see the lines of the little redoubt thrown up by the 
incredible diligence of Prescott; defended to the last 
extremity by his lion-hearted valor; and within which the 
corner-stone of our monument has now T taken its posi- 
tion. You see where Warren fell, and where Parker, 
Gardner, McCleary, Moore, and other early patriots fell 
with him. Those who survived that day, and whose lives 
have been prolonged to the present hour, are now around 
you. Some of them you have known in the trying scenes 
of the war. Behold! they now stretch forth their feeble 
arms and embrace you. Behold ! they raise their trembling 
voices to invoke the blessing of God on you and yours 
forever. 

Sir, you have assisted us in laying the foundation of 
this structure. You have heard us rehearse, with our 
feeble commendation, the names of departed patriots. 
Monuments and eulogy belong to the dead. We give 
them this day to Warren and his associates. On other 
occasions they have been given to your more immediate 
companions in arms, to Washington, to Greene, to Gates, 
to Sullivan, and to Lincoln. We have become reluctant 
to grant these, our highest and last honors, further. We 



70 DANIEL WEBSTER 

would gladly hold them yet back from the little remnant 
of that immortal band. " Serus in coelum redeas!' 6 
Illustrious as are your merits, yet far, oh, very far distant 
be the day, when any inscript on shall bear your name, or 
any tongue pronounce its eulogy ! 

The leading reflection to which this occasion seems to 
invite us, respects the great changes which have happened 
in the fifty years since the battle of Bunker Hill was 
fought. And it peculiarly marks the character of the 
present age, that, in looking at these changes, and in esti- 
mating their effect on our conditions, we are obliged to 
consider, not what has been done in our country only, 
but in others also. In these interesting times, while na- 
tions are making separate and individual advances in 
improvement, they make, too, a common progress; like 
vessels on a common tide, propelled by the gales at differ- 
ent rates, according to their several structure and man- 
agement, but all moved forward by one mighty current, 
strong enough to bear onward whatever does not sink 
beneath it. 

The great wheel of political revolution began to move 
in America. Here its rotation was guarded, regular, and 
safe. Transferred to the other Continent, from unfortu- 
nate but natural causes, it received an irregular and 
violent impulse; it whirled along with a fearful celerity; 
till at length, like the chariot-wheels in the races of an- 
tiquity, it took fire from the rapidity of its own motion, 
and blazed onward, spreading conflagration and terror 
around. 

We learn from the result of this experiment, how for- 
tunate was our own condition, and how admirably the 
character of our people was calculated for setting the 
great example of popular governments. The possession of 
power did not turn the heads of the American people, for 
they had long been in the habit of exercising a great 



BUNKER HILL ADDR1 71 

• ee of self-control. Although the paramount authority 
of the parent state existed over them, yet a large field 
of legislation had always been open to our colonial as- 
semblies. They were accustomed to representative bodies 
and the forms of free government ; they understood the 
doctrine of the division of power among different branches 
and the necessity of checks on each. The character of 
our countrymen, moreover, was sober, moral, and re- 
ligious; and there was little in the change to shock their 
feelings of justice and humanity, or even to disturb an 
honest prejudice. We had no domestic throne to over- 
turn, no privileged orders to cast down, no violent changes 
of property to encounter. In the American Revolution, 
no man sought or wished for more than to defend and 
enjoy his own. None hoped for plunder or for spoil. 
Rapacity was unknown to it; the axe was not among the 
instruments of its accomplishment; and we all know that 
it could not have lived a single day under any well- 
founded imputation of possessing a tendency adverse to 
the Christian religion. 

It need not surprise us, that, under circumstances less 
auspicious, political revolutions elsewhere, even when well 
intended, have terminated differently. It is, indeed, a 
great achievement, it is the masterwork of the world, to 
establish governments entirely popular on lasting founda- 
tions; nor is it easy, indeed, to introduce the popular prin- 
ciple at all into governments to which it has been alto- 
gether a stranger. It cannot be doubted, however, that 
Europe has come out of the contest, in which she has 
been so long engaged, with greatly superior knowledge, 
and, in many respects, in a highly improved condition. 
Whatever benefit has been acquired is likely to be re- 
tained, for it consists mainly in the acquisition of more 
enlightened ideas. And although kingdoms and provinces 
mav be wrested from the hands that hold them, in the 



72 DANIEL WEBSTER 

same manner they were obtained; although ordinary and 
vulgar power may, in human affairs, be lost as it has been 
won; yet it is the glorious prerogative of the empire of 
knowledge, that what it gains it never loses. On the 
contrary, it increases by the multiple of its own power; 
all its ends become means; all its attainments, helps to 
new conquests. Its whole abundant harvest is but so 
much seed wheat, and nothing has limited, and nothing 
can limit, the amount of ultimate product. 

Under the influence of this rapidly increasing knowl- 
edge, the people have begun, in all forms of government, 
to think and to reason, on affairs of state. Regarding 
government as an institution for the public good, they 
demand a knowledge of its operations, and a participation 
in its exercise. A call for the representative system, 
wherever it is not enjoyed, and where there is already 
intelligence enough to estimate its value, is perseveringly 
made. Where men may speak out, they demand it; where 
the bayonet is at their throats, they pray for it. 

When Louis the Fourteenth said, " I am the State," 7 
he expressed the essence of the doctrine of unlimited 
power. By the rules of that system, the people are dis- 
connected from the State; they are its subjects, it is their 
lord. These ideas, founded in the love of power, and long 
supported by the excess and the abuse of it, are yielding, 
in our age, to other opinions; and the civilized world 
seems at last to be proceeding to the conviction of that 
fundamental and manifest truth, that the powers of gov- 
ernment are but a trust, and that they cannot be lawfully 
exercised but for the good of the community. As knowl- 
edge is more and more extended, this conviction becomes 
more and more general. Knowledge, in truth, is the great 
sun in the firmament. Life and power are scattered with 
all its beams. The prayer of the Grecian champion, when 
enveloped in unnatural clouds and darkness, is the ap- 



BUNKER HILL ADDRESS 73 

propriate political supplication for the people of every 
country not yet blessed with free institutions: 

11 Dispel this cloud, the light of heaven restore, 
Give me to see, — and Ajax asks no more." 

We may hope that the growing influence of enlight- 
ened sentiment will promote the permanent peace of the 
world. Wars to maintain family alliances, to uphold or 
to cast down dynasties, and to regulate successions to 
thrones, which have occupied so much room in the history 
of modern times, if not less likely to happen at all, will be 
less likely to become general and involve many nations, 
as the great principle shall be more and more established, 
that the interest of the world is peace, and its first great 
statute, that every nation possesses the power of estab- 
lishing a government for itself. But public opinion has 
attained also an influence over governments who do not 
admit the popular principle into their organization. A 
necessary respect for the judgment of the world operates, 
in some measure, as a control over the most unlimited 
forms of authority. It is owing, perhaps, to this truth, 
that the interesting struggle of the Greeks 8 has been suf- 
fered to go on so long, without a direct interference, 
either to wrest that country from its present masters, or 
to execute the system of pacification by force; and, with 
united strength, lay the neck of Christian and civilized 
Greece at the foot of the barbarian Turk. Let us thank 
God that we live in an age when something has influence 
besides the bayonet, and when the sternest authority does 
not venture to encounter the scorching power of public 
reproach. Any attempt of the kind I have mentioned 
should be met by one universal burst of indignation; the 
air of the civilized world ought to be made too warm to 
be comfortably breathed by any one who would hazard it. 



74 DANIEL WEBSTER 

And, now, let us indulge an honest exultation in the 
conviction of the benefit which the example of our country 
has produced, and is likely to produce, on human freedom 
and human happiness. Let us endeavor to comprehend 
in all its magnitude, and to feel in all its importance, the 
part assigned to us in the great drama of human affairs. 
We are placed at the head of the system of representative 
and popular governments. Thus far our example shows 
that such governments are compatible, not only with 
respectability and power, but with repose, with peace, with 
security of personal rights, with good laws, and a just 
administration. 

We are not propagandists. Wherever other systems 
are preferred, either as being thought better in them- 
selves, or as better suited to existing conditions, we leave 
the preference to be enjoyed. Our history hitherto proves, 
however, that the popular form is practicable, and that 
with wisdom and knowledge men may govern themselves; 
and the duty incumbent on us is to preserve the con- 
sistency of this cheering example, and take care that noth- 
ing may weaken its authority with the world. If, in our 
case, the representative system ultimately fail, popular 
governments must be pronounced impossible. No com- 
bination of circumstances more favorable to the experi- 
ment can ever be expected to occur. The last hopes of 
mankind, therefore, rest with us; and if it should be pro- 
claimed that our example had become an argument against 
the experiment, the knell of popular liberty would be 
sounded throughout the earth. 

These are excitements to duty; but they are not sug- 
gestions of doubt. Our history and our condition, all 
that is gone before us, and all that surrounds us, au- 
thorize the belief that popular governments, though sub- 
ject to occasional variations, in form perhaps not always 
for the better, may yet, in their general character, be as 



BUNKKR HILL ADDRESS 75 

durable and permanent as other systems. We know, 
indeed, that in our country any other is impossible. The 
principle of free governments adheres to the American 
soil. It is bedded in it, immovable as its mountains. 

And let the sacred obligations which have devolved on 
this generation, and on us, sink deep into our hearts. 
Those who established our liberty and our government 
are daily dropping from among us. The great trust now 
descends to new hands. Let us apply ourselves to that 
which is presented to us, as our appropriate object. We 
can win no laurels in a war for independence. Earlier 
and worthier hands have gathered them all. Nor are 
there places for us by the side of Solon, and Alfred, and 
other founders of states. Our fathers have filled them. 
But there remains to us a great duty of defense and 
preservation ; and there is opened to us, also, a noble 
pursuit, to w^hich the spirit of the times strongly invites 
us. Our proper business is improvement. Let our age 
be the age of improvement. In a day of peace, let us 
advance the arts of peace and the works of peace. Let 
us develop the resources of our land, call forth its powers, 
build up its institutions, promote all its great interests, 
and see whether we also, in our day and generation, may 
not perform something worthy to be remembered. Let 
us cultivate a true spirit of union and harmony. In pur- 
suing the great objects which our condition points out to 
us, let us act under a settled conviction, and an habitual 
feeling, that these twenty-four States are one country. 
Let our conceptions be enlarged to the circle of our duties. 
Let us extend our ideas over the whole of the vast field 
in which we are called to act. Let our object be, our 

COUNTRY, OUR WHOLE COUNTRY, AND NOTHING BUT 

our country. And, by the blessing of God, may that 
country itself become a vast and splendid monument, not 
of oppression and terror, but of Wisdom, of Peace, and 



76 DANIEL WEBSTER 

of Liberty, upon which the world may gaze with ad- 
miration forever! 

Exactly what did Webster wish. to commemorate? 

In what sense is this speech a valedictory of the American 
Revolution? 

In what respects was the occasion fit for a commemorative 
address? 

Did the orator in delivering this address contend with opposi- 
tion of any sort? 

Why is formal argument out of place in this address? 

Point out instances where Webster used persons or places to 
make his words persuasive. 

Why were current events given a place in this commemora- 
tive address? 

State as briefly as possible the thought that underlies the 
address as a whole. 

Point out respects in which Webster's ideal of government is 
more democratic than Chatham's. 



WEBSTER'S REPLY TO HAYNE 

January 26, 1830 

In 1824 when Henry Clay proposed a tariff bill which 
raised the duty on imported goods to thirty-three 
and a third per cent and to a minimum of thirty cents 
a yard on cotton cloth, the measure was opposed by 
Daniel Webster. He maintained that Engish manu- 
facturerers had prospered in spite of protection, not 
because of it; and he questioned the wisdom of at- 
tempting to support a business that " cannot support 
itself.'' Much more outspoken in their opposition to 
a protective tariff at this time, however, were Cal- 
houn, Randolph, and other southern statesmen. They 
held that the current import duties were designed to 
rob the southern agriculturists for the benefit of Xew 
England. 

In 1828 when a still higher tariff was under discus- 
sion Webster failed to oppose the measure. While in 
theory he was still inclined to free trade, he believed 
it unwise to press his own views since the country 
had committed itself to protection in 1824 and various 
industries had been organized with that understand- 
ing. This change in his public policy, without regard 
for his conflicting personal feelings, is a tribute to 
the earnestness and sincerity of his patriotism. The 
bill when passed was dubbed by the South, The Tariff 
of Abominations. Unable to overcome the sentiment 
in favor of protection in Congress, Vice-President 
Calhoun formulated his doctrine of Nullification. 

77 



78 DANIEL WEBSTER 

According to this theory, any state might forbid the 
operation within its limits of any act of Congress 
which in its opinion did not accord with the Federal 
Constitution. Although rumors of South Carolina's 
advocacy of Nullification were current, the doctrine 
was never presented in Congress until a Land Bill was 
debated in 1830. 

This measure which proposed to cease tempo- 
rarily, the marketing of public land, was strenuously 
opposed by members of Congress from the Western 
States. Mr. Robert Y. Hayne, of South Carolina, 
was quick to note this lack of agreement between the 
West and the East, and he attempted to use the dif- 
ference of opinion for the benefit of his own state. 
He proposed that the South and West unite their 
forces in Congress to secure desired legislation. The 
South was to get a lower tariff and the West was to 
obtain legislation that would facilitate the marketing 
of public land. In furthering this plan he eulogized 
South Carolina and attacked New England from many 
points of view. In particular he criticized the tariff 
legislation favored by New England and, in the course 
of his discussion, set forth for the first time a full 
exposition of Calhoun's doctrine of Nullification. 

The day following Hayne's speech, Webster, then 
in his first term as senator from Massachusetts, made 
his famous reply. He had had only the intervening 
night in which to make formal preparation, but he 
never spoke to better advantage. In clearness and dig- 
nity of language, and in force of argument, his speech 
is unsurpassed. His words, as Lodge says, which rang 
out in 1830 in the Senate Chamber have come down 
through the long years of political conflict and civil 
war and at last have become part of the political creed 
of every one of his countrymen. He expressed what 



REPLY TO HAYNE 79 

the truest patriots of his time felt but could not say. 
He defined the character of the Union. 



REPLY TO HAYNE 

Daniel Webster 

Let me bbserve that the eulogium pronounced by the 
honorable gentleman 1 on the character of the State of 
South Carolina, for her Revolutionary and other merits, 
meets my hearty concurrence. 2 I shall not acknowledge 
that the honorable member goes before me in regard to 
whatever of distinguished talent, or distinguished charac- 
ter, South Carolina has produced. I claim part of the 
honor; I partake in the pride of her great names. I 
claim them for countrymen, one and all — the Laurenses, 
the Rutledges, the Pinckneys, the Sumpters, the Marions — 
Americans all, w T hose fame is no more to be hemmed in 
by state lines, than their talents and patriotism were 
capable of being circumscribed within the same narrow 
limits. In their day and generation they served and hon- 
ored the country, and the w r hole country; and their re- 
nown is of the treasures of the w T hole country. Him 
whose honored name 3 the gentleman himself bears, — 
does he esteem me less capable of gratitude for his patri- 
otism, or sympathy for his sufferings, than if his eyes had 
first opened upon the light of Massachusetts instead o*f 
South Carolina? Sir, does he suppose it in his power to 
exhibit a Carolina name so bright as to produce envy in 
my bosom? No, sir, increased gratification and delight, 
rather. I thank God that, if I am gifted with little of the 
spirit which is able to raise mortals to the skies, I have 
yet none, as I trust, of that other spirit which would drag 
angels down. When I shall be found, sir, in my place 



80 DANIEL WEBSTER 

here in the Senate, or elsewhere, to sneer at public merit, 
because it happens to spring up beyond the little limits 
of my own state or neighborhood ; when I refuse, for any 
such cause or for any cause, the homage due to American 
talent, to elevated patriotism, to sincere devotion to lib- 
erty and the country; or, if I see an uncommon endow- 
ment of heaven, if I see extraordinary capacity and virtue, 
in any son of the South, and if, moved by local prejudice 
or gangrened by state jealousy, I get up here to abate the 
tithe of a hair from his just character and just fame, may 
my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth! 

Sir, let me recur to pleasing recollections; let me in- 
dulge in refreshing remembrance of the past; let me 
remind you that, in early times, no states cherished 
greater harmony, both in principle and feeling, than Mas- 
sachusetts and South Carolina. Would to God that har- 
mony might again return! Shoulder to shoulder they 
went through the Revolution; hand in hand they stood 
round the administration of Washington, and felt his 
own great arm lean on them for support. Unkind feel- 
ing (if it exists), alienation, and distrusts are the growth, 
unnatural to such soils, of false principles since sown. 
They are weeds, the seeds of which that same great arm 
never scattered. 

Mr. President, I shall enter on no encomium upon 
Massachusetts; she needs none. There she is! Behold 
her, and judge for yourselves. There is her history; the 
world knows it by heart. The past, at least, is secure. 
There is Boston, and Concord, and Lexington, and 
Bunker Hill; and there they will remain forever. The 
bones of her sons, falling in the great struggle for Inde- 
pendence, now lie mingled with the soil of every state 
from New England to Georgia; and there they will lie 
forever. And, sir, where American liberty raised its 
first voice, and where its youth was nurtured and sus- 



REPLY TO HAYNE 81 

tained, there it still lives, in the strength of its manhood 
and full of its original spirit. If discord and disunion 
shall wound it, if party strife and blind ambition shall 
hawk at it and tear it, if folly and madness, if uneasiness 
under salutary and necessary restraint shall succeed in 
separating it from that Union by which alone its existence 
is made sure, it will stand, in the end, by the side of that 
cradle in which its infancy was rocked ; it will stretch 
forth its arm with whatever vigor it may still retain over 
the friends who gather round it; and it will fall at last, 
if fall it must, amid the proudest monuments of its own 
glory, and on the very spot of its origin. 

I understand the honorable gentleman from South 
Carolina to maintain that it is a right of the state legis- 
latures to interfere whenever, in their judgment, this 
government transcends its constitutional limits, and to 
arrest the operation of its laws. I understand him to 
maintain this right, as a right existing under the Consti- 
tution, not as a right to overthrow it on the ground of 
extreme necessity, such as would justify violent revolu- 
tion. I understand him to insist that, if the exigency of 
the case, in the opinion of any state government, require 
it, such state government may, by its own sovereign au- 
thority, annul an act of the general government which it 
deems plainly and palpably unconstitutional. 

This leads us to inquire into the origin of this govern- 
ment and the source of its power. Whose agent is it? 
Is it the creature of the state legislators, or the creature 
of the people? If the government of the United States 
be the agent of the State governments, then they may 
control it, provided they can agree in the manner of con- 
trolling it; if it be the agent of the people, then the people 
alone can control it, restrain it, modify, or reform it. It 
is observable enough that the doctrine for which the 
honorable gentleman contends leads him to the necessity 



82 DANIEL WEBSTER 

of maintaining, not only that this general government is 
the creature of the States, but that it is the creature of each 
of the States severally, so that each may assert the power 
for itself of determining whether it acts within the limits 
of its authority. It is the servant of four and twenty 7 
masters, of different wills and different purposes, and yet 
bound to obey all. This absurdity (for it seems no less) 
arises from a misconception as to the origin of this gov- 
ernment and its true character. It is, sir, the people's 
Constitution, 4 the people's government, made for the 
people, made by the people, and answerable to the people. 
The people of the United States have declared that this 
Constitution shall be the supreme law. We must either 
admit the proposition or dispute their authority. 

The States are, unquestionably, sovereign, so far as 
their sovereignty is not affected by this supreme law. But 
the State legislatures, as political bodies, however sover- 
eign, are yet not sovereign over the people. So far as the 
people have given power to the general government, so 
far the grant is unquestionably good, and the government 
holds of the people, and not of the State governments. 
We are all agents of the same supreme power, the people. 
The general government and the State governments de- 
rive their authority from the same source. Neither can, 
in relation to the other, be called primary, though one is 
definite and restricted, and the other general and residu- 
ary. The national government possesses those powers 
which it can be shown the people have conferred on it, 
and no more. All the rest belongs to the State govern- 
ments, or to the people themselves. 

I must now beg to ask, sir, whence is this supposed 
right of the States derived? Where do they find the 
power to interfere with the laws of the Union? Sir, the 
opinion which the honorable gentleman maintains is a 
notion founded on a total misapprehension, in my judg- 



REPLY TO HAYNE 83 

merit, of the origin of this government, and of the founda- 
tion on which it stands. I hold it to be a popular gov- 
ernment, erected by the people; those who administer it 
responsible to the people; and itself capable of being 
amended and modified, just as the people may choose it 
should be. It is as popular, just as truly emanating from 
the people, as the State governments. It is created for 
one purpose; the State governments for another. It has 
its own powers; they have theirs. There is no more 
authority with them to arrest the operation of a law of 
Congress, than with Congress to arrest the operation of 
their laws. 

We are here to administer a Constitution emanating 
immediately from the people, and trusted by them to our 
administration. It is not the creature of the State gov- 
ernments. It is of no moment to the argument, that cer- 
tain acts of the State legislatures are necessary to fill our 
seats in this body. That is not one of their original State 
powers, a part of the sovereignty of the State. It is a 
duty which the people, by the Constitution itself, have 
imposed on the State legislatures, and which they might 
have left to be performed elsewhere, if they had seen fit. 
So they have left the choice of president with electors; 
but all this does not affect the proposition that this whole 
government, president, Senate, and House of Representa- 
tives, is a popular government. It leaves it still all its 
popular character. The governor of a State (in some 
of the States) is chosen, not directly by the people, but 
by those who are chosen by the people, for the purpose 
of performing, among other duties, that of electing a gov- 
ernor. Is the government of the State, on that account, 
not a popular government? This government, sir, is the 
independent offspring of the popular will. It is not the 
creature of State legislatures; nay, more, if the whole 
truth must be told, the people brought it into existence, 



84 

established it, and have hitherto supported it, for the very 
purpose, among others, of imposing certain salutary re- 
straints on State sovereignties. The States cannot now 
make war; they cannot contract alliances; they cannot 
make, each for itself, separate regulations of commerce; 
they cannot lay imposts; they cannot coin money. If 
this Constitution, sir, be the creature of State legislatures, 
it must be admitted that it has obtained a strange control 
over the volitions of its creators. 

Mr. President, I have thus stated the reasons of my 
dissent to the doctrines which have been advanced and 
maintained. I am conscious of having detained you and 
the Senate much too long. I was drawn into the debate 
with no previous deliberation, such as is suited to the 
discussion of so grave and important a subject. But it is 
a subject of which my heart is full, and I have not been 
willing to suppress the utterance of its spontaneous senti- 
ments. I cannot even now persuade myself to relinquish 
it, without expressing once more deep conviction that, 
since it represents nothing less than the union of the 
States, it is of the most vital and essential importance to 
the public happiness. 

I profess, sir, in my career hitherto to have kept steadily 
in view the prosperity and honor of the whole country 
and the preservation of our federal Union. It is to that 
Union we owe our safety at home and our consideration 
and dignity abroad. It is to that Union that we are 
chiefly indebted for whatever makes us most proud of our 
country. That Union we reached only by the discipline 
of our virtues in the severe school of adversity. It had its 
origin in the necessities of disordered finance, prostrate 
commerce, and ruined credit. Under its benign influence 
those great interests immediately awoke, as from the dead, 
and sprang forth with newness of life. Every year of 
its duration has teemed with fresh proofs of its utility 



REPLY TO HAYNE 85 

and its blessings; and although our territory has stretched 
out wider and wider and our population spread farther 
and farther, they have not outrun its protection or its 
benefits. It has been to us all a copious fountain of na- 
tional, social, and personal happiness. 

I have not allowed myself, sir, to look beyond the 
Union to see what might lie hidden in the dark recess 
behind. I have not coolly weighed the chances of pre- 
serving liberty when the bonds that unite us together 
shall be broken asunder. I have not accustomed myself 
to hang over the precipice of disunion, to see whether with 
my short sight I can fathom the depth of the abyss below; 
nor could I regard him as a safe counselor in the affairs 
of this government, whose thoughts should be mainly bent 
on considering, not how this Union may be best pre- 
served, but how tolerable might be the condition of the 
people when it should be broken up and destroyed. 

While the Union lasts we have high, exciting, grati- 
fying prospects spread out before us for us and our chil- 
dren. Beyond that I seek not to penetrate the veil. God 
grant that in my day at least that curtain may not rise! 
God grant that on my vision never may be opened what 
lies behind! When my eyes shall be turned to behold 
for the last time the sun in heaven, may I not see him 
shining on the broken and dishonored fragments of a 
once glorious Union; on States dissevered, discordant, 
belligerent; on a land rent with civil feuds, or drenched, 
it may be, in fraternal blood! Let their last feeble and 
lingering glance rather behold the gorgeous ensign of the 
Republic, now known and honored throughout the earth, 
still full high advanced, its arms and trophies streaming 
in their original lustre, not a stripe erased or polluted, nor 
a single star obscured, bearing for its motto no such miser- 
able interrogatory as, " What is all this worth?" nor 
those other words of delusion and folly, " Liberty first 



86 DANIEL WEBSTER 

and Union afterward " ; but everywhere, spread all over 
in characters of living light, blazing on all its ample 
folds, as they float over the sea and over the land, and in 
every wind under the whole heavens, that other sentiment 
dear to every American heart — Liberty and Union, now 
and forever, one and inseparable! 

What was the rhetorical and persuasive effect of Webster's 
praise of South Carolina? 

From what source does Webster derive all legal authority? 

In what sense is the Constitution the supreme law of the land? 

Whose views were the more democratic, Hayne's or Web- 
ster's? 

What reason is there for maintaining that this speech was 
one of the important influences that brought on the Civil War? 

To what motives did Webster appeal in this speech? 



ADDRESS AT COOPER INSTITUTE 

February 27, i860 

At the close of the Revolution Massachusetts abol- 
ished slavery, and her example was gradually followed 
by the other states north of Virginia. At that time in 
the South also it seemed probable that little by little 
slavery would disappear until the entire territory of 
the United States was free. The invention of the cot- 
ton gin in 1793, however, increased many times the 
profit that could be gained from slave labor and ar- 
rested the movement for abolition. After the begin- 
ning of the nineteenth century the prosperity of the 
South seemed to depend on the continuance of slavery. 

In the North the sentiment for abolition meanwhile 
grew stronger, but the difference of opinion between 
the two sections was not yet so profound as to pre- 
vent the adoption in 1820 of Henry Clay's Missouri 
Compromise which limited the spread of slavery in 
the territories north of latitude 36 ° 30'. In 1830 
in Boston, William Lloyd Garrison began to publish 
The Liberator and thereby initiated in the face of 
great opposition even in the North an aggressive strug- 
gle against slavery. 

In 1850 again Henry Clay was able to secure in 
Congress, with great difficulty, a colorless compromise 
between the two conflicting sections. Among its 
terms was a provision that the territories of Utah and 
New Mexico were to be organized without any Fed- 
eral action concerning slavery. It was not long, how- 
ever, before slavery was introduced into these terri- 

87 



88 ADDRESS AT COOPER INSTITUTE 

tories through the action of their territorial legislatures 
This result enabled Stephen A. Douglas, the leader of 
the Northern Democrats to secure by the aid of 
Southern votes the passage by Congress in 1854 of 
the Kansas-Nebraska bill, a measure that abrogated 
the Missouri Compromise and left to home rule or 
" popular sovereignty " to determine whether Kansas 
and Nebraska were to be free or slave. To combat 
this measure the Republican party was organized. 

In 1857, however, the Supreme Court, in the Dred 
Scott decision, held that the Constitution recognized 
slaves as property which Congress must protect. This 
view, unexpectedly favorable to slavery, was at once 
adopted by the South in place of Douglas's theory of 
state authority or " popular sovereignty." The Demo- 
crats in the North were unwilling to support the Dred 
Scott decision as it seemed to place slavery under the 
protection of Congress and to do away with all future 
possibility of compromise. Many of the Northern 
Democrats at this time accordingly were forced from 
their neutral position and preferring to oppose rather 
than defend slavery were absorbed by the Republican 
party. 

In 1858 in Illinois Douglas was the candidate of the 
Democratic party for the United States senate and 
Abraham Lincoln was nominated by the Republicans. 
Lincoln challenged Douglas, who was a highly edu- 
cated and brilliant speaker, to a series of seven public 
debates ; and Douglas accepted on the condition that 
he should both open and close each debate. The 
contest has been called the greatest " intellectual 
wrestle " that has taken place in America. The 
speeches were reported throughout the country and 
the contest was followed with interest everywhere. 
Although the legislature sent Douglas to the Senate, 



ADDRESS AT COOPER INSTITUTE S<j 

the people supported Lincoln. It was generally con- 
ceded that he had had the better of the argument, and 
Illinois went Republican by five thousand majority. 
All over the North the people were eager to see this 
young giant of the West who in force of logic and 
strategic ability had proved his superiority to one of 
the foremost politicians and debaters of the time. 

When Lincoln was invited in October, 1859, by the 
Young Men's Republican Club of New York City to 
deliver a political address before their association, he 
accepted with eagerness. Douglas had recently spoken 
at Columbus and had reaffirmed his doctrine of " popu- 
lar sovereignty " for the control of slavery. He had 
attempted to ground his views upon the authority of 
the Constitution and the writings of the founders of 
the republic. He had closed his speech by saying, 
" Our fathers, when they framed this government 
under which we live, understood this question as well 
and even better, than we do now." To these senti-' 
ments Lincoln determined to reply ; and he worked 
long and laboriously to make his answer conclusive. 

Finally, on February 2J, i860, in the large hall of 
Cooper Institute, he rose to give his address before a 
great audience. He was far from feeling confident. 
He spoke the first sentences with diffidence — But why 
write the story anew? It is told in the words of one 
who heard him speak. Joseph Choate says : 

" It is now forty years since I first saw and heard 
Abraham Lincoln, but the impression which he left 
on my mind is ineffaceable. After his great successes 
in the West he came to New York to make a political 
address. He appeared in even- sense of the word like 
one of the plain people among whom he loved to be 
counted. At first sight there was nothing impressive 
or imposing about him — except that his great stature 



9 o ADDRESS AT COOPER INSTITUT 

singled him out from the crowd; his clothes hung 
awkwardy on his giant frame, his face was of a dark 
pallor, without the slightest tinge of color ; his seamed 
and rugged features bore the furrows of hardship and 
struggle ; his deep-set eyes looked sad and anxious ; 
his countenance in repose gave little evidence of that 
brain power which had raised him from the lowest to 
the highest station among his countrymen ; as he talked 
to me before the meeting, he seemed ill at ease, with 
that sort of apprehension which a young man might 
feel before presenting himself to a new and strange 
audience, whose critical disposition he dreaded. It 
was a great audience, including all the noted men — 
all the learned and cultured — of his party in New 
York : editors, clergymen, statesmen, lawyers, mer- 
chants, critics. They were all very curious to hear 
him. His fame as a powerful speaker had preceded 
him, and exaggerated rumor of his wit — the worst 
forerunner of an orator— had reached the East. When 
Mr. Bryant presented him, on the high platform of 
Cooper Institute, a vast sea of eager faces, upturned, 
greeted him, full of intense curiosity to see what this 
rude child of the people was like. He was equal 
to the occasion. When he spoke he was transformed ; 
his eyes kindled, his voice rang, his face shone and 
seemed to light up the whole assembly. For an hour 
and a half he held his audience in the hollow of his 
hand. His style of speech and manner of delivery were 
severely simple. What Lowell called ' The grand 
simplicities of the Bible/ with which he was so fa- 
miliar, were reflected in his discourse. With no at- 
tempt at ornament or rhetoric, without parade or 
pretence, he spoke straight to the point. If any came 
expecting the turgid eloquence or the ribaldry of the 
frontier, they must have been startled at the earnest 



ADDRESS AT COOPER INSTITUTE 91 

and sincere purity of his utterances. It was marvel- 
lous to see how this untutored man, by mere self- 
discipline and tl;e chastening of his own spirit, had 
outgrown all meretricious arts, and found his own way 
to the grandeur and strength of absolute simplicity." 

11 That night the great hall, and the next day the 
whole city rang with delighted applause and con- 
gratulations, and he who had come as a stranger de- 
parted with the laurels of a great triumph." 

It was the last time that Abraham Lincoln spoke as 
a stranger before any audience. He who had been 
the leader of the Republicans of the Middle West had 
now become the foremost Republican of America. He 
was nominated for the presidency in the convention at 
Chicago on May 16, i860, and was elected president 
the following November. 

Lincoln's speech at Cooper Union was influential in 
unifying Northern anti-slavery sentiment, in insuring 
the success of the anti-slavery party, and in securing 
for America the election of a great president and a 
great moral leader. 



ADDRESS AT COOPER INSTITUTE 

Abraham Lincoln 

Mr. President and Fellow-Citizens of New York: 
The facts with which I shall deal this evening are mainly 
old and familiar ; nor is there anything new in the general 
use I shall make of them. If there shall be any novelty, 
it will be in the mode of presenting the facts, and the 
inferences and observations following that presentation. 
In his speech last autumn at Columbus Ohio, as reported 
in the New York Times, Senator Douglas said; 



92 ABRAHAM LINCOLN 

Our fathers, when they framed the government under which 
we live, understood this question just as well, and even better, 
than we do now. 

I fully endorse this, and I adopt it as a text for this dis- 
course. I so adopt it because it furnishes a precise and 
agreed starting point for a discussion between Republi- 
cans and that wing of the Democracy headed by Senator 
Douglas. It simply leaves the inquiry: What was the 
understanding those fathers had of the question men- 
tioned ? 

What is the frame of government under which we live ? 
The answer must be, " The Constitution of the United 
States." x That Constitution consists of the original 
framed in 1787, and under which the present government 
first went into operation, and twelve subsequently framed 
amendments, the first ten of which were framed in 1789. 

Who were our fathers that framed the Constitution? 
I suppose the " thirty-nine " who signed the original in- 
strument may be fairly called our fathers who framed 
that part of the present government. It is almost exactly 
true to say they framed it, and it is altogether true to say 
they fairly represented the opinion and sentiment of the 
whole nation at that time. Their names, being familiar 
to nearly all, and accessible to quite all, need not now be 
repeated. 

I take these " thirty-nine," for the present, as being 
" our fathers who framed the government under which 
we live." What is the question which, according to the 
test, those fathers understood " just as well and even 
better than we do now "? 

It is this: Does the proper division of local from 
Federal authority, or anything in the Constitution forbid 
our Federal Government to control as to slavery in our 
Federal Territories? 

Upon this, Senator Douglas holds the affirmative, and 



ADDRESS AT COOPER INSTITUTE 93 

Republicans the negative. This affirmation and denial 
form an issue; and this issue -this question — is precisely 
what the text declares our fathers understood " better 
than we." Let us now inquire whether the " thirty- 
nine," or any of them, ever acted upon this question; and, 
if they did, how they acted upon it — how they expressed 
that understanding. 

We have twenty-three out of our thirty-nine fathers 
14 who framed the government under which we live," who 
have, upon their official responsibility and their corporal 
oaths, 2 acted upon the very question which the text affirms 
they " understood just as well, and even better, than we 
do now " ; and twenty-one of them — a clear majority of 
the whole " thirty-nine " — so acting upon it as to make 
them guilty of gross political impropriety and willful per- 
jury, if, in their understanding, any proper division be- 
tween local and Federal authority, or anything in the 
Constitution they had made themselves, and sworn to 
support, forbade the Federal Government to control as 
to slavery in the Federal Territories. Thus the twenty- 
one acted and, as actions speak louder than words, so 
actions under such responsibility speak still louder. 

The remaining sixteen of the " thirty-nine," so far as 
I have discovered, have left no record of their under- 
standing upon the direct question of Federal control of 
slavery in the Federal Territories. But there is much 
reason to believe that their understanding upon the ques- 
tion would not have appeared different from that of their 
twenty-three compeers, had it been manifested at all. 

For the purpose of adhering rigidly to the text, I have 
purposely omitted whatever understanding may have been 
manifested by any person, however distinguished, other 
than the thirty-nine fathers who framed the original Con- 
stitution ; and for the same reason I have also omitted 
whatever understanding may have been manifested by 



94 ABRAHAM LINCOLN 

any of the " thirty-nine " even on any other phase of the 
general question of slavery. If we should look into their 
acts and declarations on those other phases, as the foreign 
slave trade and the morality and policy of slavery gener- 
ally, it would appear to us that on the direct question of 
Federal control of slavery in Federal Territories, the six- 
teen, if they had acted at all, would probably have acted 
just as the twenty-three did. Among that sixteen were 
several of the most noted anti-slavery men of those times 
— as Dr. Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, Gouverneur 
Morris — while there was not one now known to have 
been otherwise, unless it may be John Rutledge, of South 
Carolina. 

The sum of the whole is that of our thirty-nine fathers 
who framed the original Constitution, twenty-one — a 
clear majority of the whole — certainly understood that 
no proper division of local from Federal authority, nor 
any part of the Constitution, forbade the Federal Govern- 
ment to control as to slavery in the Federal Territories; 
while all the rest had probably the same understanding. 
Such, unquestionably, was the understanding of our 
fathers who framed the original Constitution; and the 
text affirms that they understood the question " better 
than we." 

And now, if they would listen — as I suppose they will 
not — I would address a few words to the Southern people. 

I would say to them: You consider yourselves a rea- 
sonable and a just people; and I consider that in the 
general qualities of reason and justice you are not inferior 
to any other people. Still, when you speak of us Repub- 
licans, you do so only to denounce us as reptiles, or, at 
the best, as no better than outlaws. You will grant a 
hearing to pirates or murderers, but nothing like it to 
" Black Republicans." In all your contentions with one 
another, each of you deems an unconditional condemna- 



ADDRESS AT COOPER INSTITUTE 95 

tion of " Black Republicanism " as the first thing to be 
attended to. Indeed, such condemnation of us seems to 
be an indispensable prerequisite — license, so to speak — 
among 3011 to be admitted or permitted to speak at all. 
Now, can you or not be prevailed upon to pause and to 
consider whether this is quite just to us, or even to your- 
selves? Bring forward your charges and specifications, 
and then be patient long enough to hear us deny or 
justify. 

You say we are sectional. We deny it. That makes 
an issue; and the burden of proof is upon you. You 
produce your proof; and what is it? Why, that our 
party has no existence in your section — gets no votes in 
your section. The fact is substantially true; but does it 
prove the issue? If it does, then, in case we should, 
without change of principle, begin to get votes in your 
section, we should thereby cease to be sectional. You can- 
not escape this conclusion ; and yet, are you willing to 
abide by it? If you are, you will probably soon find that 
we have ceased to be sectional, for we shall get votes 
in your section this very year. You will then begin to 
discover, as the truth plainly is, that your proof does not 
touch the issue. The fact that we get no votes in your 
section is a fact of your making, and not' of ours. And 
if there be fault in that fact, that fault is primarily yours, 
and remains so until you show that we repel you by some 
wrong principle or practice. If we do repel you by any 
wrong principle or practice, the fault is ours; but this 
brings you to where you ought to have started — to discus- 
sion of the right or wrong of our principle. If our prin- 
ciple, put in practice, would wrong your section for the 
benefit of ours, or for any other object, then our principle, 
and we with it, are sectional, and are justly opposed and 
denounced as such. Meet us, then, on the question of 
whether our principle, put in practice, would wrong your 



96 ABRAHAM LINCOLN 

section; and so meet us as if it were possible that some- 
thing may be said on our side. Do you accept the chal- 
lenge? No? Then you really believe that the principle 
which " our fathers who framed the Government under 
which we live " thought so clearly right as to adopt it, and 
indorse it again and again, upon their official oaths, is in 
fact so clearly wrong as to demand your condemnation 
without a moment's consideration. 

Again, you say we have made the slavery question 
more prominent than it formerly was. We deny it. We 
admit that it is more prominent, but we deny that we 
made it so. It was not we, but you, who discarded the 
old policy of the fathers. We resisted, and still resist, 
your innovation; and thence comes the greater promi- 
nence of the question. Would you have that question 
reduced to its former proportions? Go back to that old 
policy. What has been will be again, under the same 
conditions. If you would have the peace of the old 
times, readopt the precepts and policy of the old times. 

You charge that we stir up insurrections among your 
slaves. We deny it; and what is your proof? Harper's 
Ferry! John Brown! 3 John Brown was no Republican; 
and you have failed to implicate a single Republican in 
his Harper's Ferry enterprise. If any member of our 
party is guilty in that matter, you know it, or you do not 
know it. If you do know it, you are inexcusable for not 
designating the man and proving the fact. If you do not 
know it, you are inexcusable for asserting it, and espe- 
cially for persisting in the assertion after you have tried 
and failed to make the proof. You need not be told that 
persisting in a charge which one does not know to be true, 
is simply malicious slander. 

Some of you admit that no Republican designedly aided 
or encouraged the Harper's Ferry affair, but still insist 
that our doctrines and declarations necessarily lead to such 



ADDRESS AT COOPER INSTITUTE 9 7 

results. We do not believe it. We know we hold no doc- 
trine, and make no declaration, which were not held to 
and made by " our fathers who framed the Government 
under which we live." You never dealt fairly by us in 
relation to this affair. When it occurred, some important 
state elections were near at hand, and you were in evi- 
dent glee with the belief that, by charging the blame upon 
us, you could get an advantage of us in those elections. 
The elections came, and your expectations were not quite 
fulfilled. Every Republican knew that, as to himself at 
least, your charge was a slander, and he was not much in- 
clined by it to cast his vote in your favor. Republican 
doctrines and declarations are accompanied with a con- 
tinual protest against any interference whatever with your 
slaves, or with you about your slaves. Surely, this does not 
encourage them to revolt. True, we do, in common with 
" our fathers who framed the Government under which 
we live," declare our belief that slavery is wrong; but 
the slaves do not hear us declare even this. For anything 
we say or do, the slaves would scarcely know there is a 
Republican party. I believe they would not, in fact, gen- 
erally know it but for your misrepresentations of us in 
their hearing. In your political contests among your- 
selves, each faction charges the other with sympathy with 
Black Republicanism; and then, to give point to the 
charges, defines Black Republicanism to simply be insur- 
rection, blood, and thunder among the slaves. 

John Brown's effort was peculiar. It was not a slave 
insurrection. It was an attempt by white men to get up a 
revolt among slaves, in which the slaves refused to par- 
ticipate. In fact, it was so absurd that the slaves, with 
all their ignorance, saw plainly enough it could not suc- 
ceed. That affair, in its philosophy, corresponds with 
the many attempts, related in history, at the assassination 
of kings and emperors. An enthusiast broods over the 



98 ABRAHAM LINCOLN 

oppression of a people till he fancies himself commissioned 
by Heaven to liberate them. He ventures the attempt, 
which ends in little else than in his own execution. 
Orsini's attempt on Louis Napoleon, 4 and John Brown's 
attempt at Harper's Ferry, were, in their philosophy, pre- 
cisely the same. The eagerness to cast blame on old 
England in the one case, and on New England in the 
other, does not disprove the sameness of the two things. 

And how much would it avail you, if you could, by the 
use of John Brown, Helper's book, 5 and the like, break 
up the Republican organization? Human action can be 
modified to some extent, but human nature cannot be 
changed. There is a judgment and a feeling against 
slavery in this nation, which cast at least a million and a 
half of votes. You cannot destroy that judgment and 
feeling — that sentiment — by breaking up the political or- 
ganization which rallies around it. You can scarcely 
scatter and disperse an army which has been formed into 
order in the face of your heaviest fire; but if you could, 
how much would you gain by forcing the sentiment which 
created it out of the peaceful channel of the ballot box 
into some other channel? What would that other chan- 
nel probably be? Would the number of John Browns 
be lessened or enlarged by the operation? 

But you will break up the Union rather than submit 
to a denial of your constitutional rights. 

That has a somewhat reckless sound; but it would be 
palliated, if not fully justified, were we proposing, by 
the mere force of numbers, to deprive you of some right 
plainly written down in the Constitution. But we are 
proposing no such thing. 

When you make these declarations you have a specific 
and well-understood allusion to an assumed constitutional 
right of yours to take slaves into the Federal Territories, 
and to hold them there as property. But no such right 



ADDRESS AT COOPER INSTITUTE 99 

is specifically written in the Constitution. That instru- 
ment is literally silent about any such right. We on the 
contrary, deny that such a right has any existence in the 
Constitution, even by implication. 

Your purpose, then, plainly stated, is that you will de- 
stroy the Government, unless you be allowed to construe 
and force the Constitution as you please, on all points in 
dispute between you and us. You will rule or ruin in all 
events. 

This, plainly stated, is your language. Perhaps you will 
say the Supreme Court has decided the disputed consti- 
tutional question in your favor. Not quite so. But 
waiving the lawyer's distinction between dictum and de- 
cision, the court has decided the question for you in a sort 
of way. The court has substantially said, it is your con- 
stitutional right to take slaves into the Federal Terri- 
tories, and to hold them there as property. 

And then it is to be remembered that " our fathers who 
framed the Government under which we live " — the men 
who made the Constitution — decided this same constitu- 
tional question in our favor long ago: decided it without 
a division among themselves when making the decision; 
without division among themselves about the meaning 
of it after it was made, and, so far as any evidence 
is left, without basing it upon any mistaken statement 
of facts. 

Under all these circumstances do you really feel 
yourselves justified to break up this government unless 
such a court decision as yours is shall be at once sub- 
mitted to as a conclusive and final rule of political action ? 
But you w T ill not abide the election of a Republican 
President! In that supposed event, you say, you will 
destroy the Union ; and then, you say, the great crime 
of having destroyed it will be upon us ! That is cool. A 
highwayman holds a pistol to my ear, and mutters through 



ioo ABRAHAM LINCOLN 

his teeth, " Stand and deliver, or I shall kill you, and 
you will be a murderer! " 

To be sure, what the robber demanded of me — my 
money — was my own; and I had a clear right to keep 
it; but it was no more my own than my vote is my 
own ; and the threat of death to me, to extort my money, 
and the threat of destruction to the Union, to extort my 
vote, can scarcely be distinguished in principle. 

A few words now to Republicans. It is exceedingly 
desirable that all parts of this great Confederacy shall 
be at peace, and in harmony one with another. Let us 
Republicans do our part to have it so. Even though 
much provoked, let us do nothing through passion and 
ill temper. Even though the Southern people will not 
so much as listen to us, let us calmly consider their 
demands, and yield to them if, in our deliberate view of 
our duty, we possibly can. Judging by all they say and 
do. and by the subject and nature of their controversy 
with us, let us determine, if we can, what will satisfy 
them. 

Will they be satisfied if the Territories be uncondition- 
ally surrendered to them? We know they will not. In 
all their present complaints against us, the Territories are 
scarcely mentioned. Invasions and insurrections are the 
rage now. Will it satisfy them if in the future we have 
nothing to do with invasions and insurrections? We know 
it will not. We so know, because we know we never had 
anything to do with invasions and insurrections; and yet 
this total abstaining does not exempt us from the charge 
and the denunciation. 

The question recurs, What will satisfy them? Simply 
this: we must not only let them alone, but we must some- 
how convince them that we do let them alone. This, we 
know by experience, is no easy task. We have been so 
trying to convince them from the very beginning of our 



ADDRESS AT COOPER INSTITUTE 101 

organization, but with no success. In all our platforms 
and speeches we have constantly protested our purpose to 
let them alone; but this has had no tendency to convince 
them. Alike unavailing to convince them is the fact that 
they have never detected a man of us in any attempt to 
disturb them. 

These natural and apparently adequate means all fail- 
ing, what will convince them ? This, and this only : cease 
to call slavery wrong, and join them in calling it right. 
And this must be done thoroughly — done in acts as w r ell 
as in words. Silence will not be tolerated — we must place 
ourselves avowedly with them. Senator Douglas's new 
sedition law must be enacted and enforced, suppressing 
all declarations that slavery is wrong., whether made in 
politics, in presses, in pulpits, or in private. We must 
arrest and return their fugitive slaves with greedy pleasure. 
We must pull down our Free-State constitutions. The 
whole atmosphere must be disinfected from all taint of 
opposition to slavery., before they will cease to believe that 
all their troubles proceed from us. 

I am quite aware they do not state their case pre- 
cisely in this way. Most of them would probably say 
to us, " Let us alone; do nothing to us, and say what 
you please about slavery." But we do let them alone, — 
have never disturbed them, — so that, after all, it is what 
we say which dissatisfies them. They will continue to 
accuse us of doing, until we cease saying. 

I am also aware they have not as yet in terms de- 
manded the overthrow of our Free-State constitutions. 
Yet those constitutions declare the wrong of slavery 
with more solemn emphasis than do all other sayings 
against it; and when all these other sayings shall have 
been silenced, the overthrow of these constitutions will 
be demanded, and nothing be left to resist the demand. 
It is nothing to the contrary that they do not demand 



102 ABRAHAM LINCOLN 

the whole of this just now. Demanding what they do, 
and for the reason they do, they can voluntarily stop 
nowhere short of this consummation. Holding, as they 
do, that slavery is morally right and socially elevating, 
they cannot cease to demand a full national recognition 
of it as a legal right and a social blessing. 

Nor can we justifiably withhold this on any ground 
save our conviction that slavery is wrong. If slavery 
is right, all w r ords, acts, laws, and constitutions against 
it are themselves wrong, and should be silenced and 
swept aw r ay. If it is right, we cannot justly object to 
its nationality — its universality; if it is wrong they can- 
not justly insist upon its extension — its enlargement. All 
they ask we could readily grant, if we thought slavery 
right; all we ask they could as readily grant, if they 
thought it wrong. Their thinking it right and our think- 
ing it wrong is the precise fact upon which depends the 
whole controversy. Thinking it right, as they do, they 
are not to blame for desiring its full recognition as being 
right; but thinking it wrong, as we do, can we yield to 
them? Can we cast our votes with their view, and 
against our own? In view of our moral, social, and 
political responsibilities, can we do this? 

Wrong as we think slavery is, we can yet afford to let 
it alone where it is, because that much is due to the 
necessity arising from its actual presence in the nation; 
but can we, while our votes will prevent it, allow it to 
spread into the national Territories, and to overrun us 
here in these free States? If our sense of duty forbids 
this, then let us stand by our duty fearlessly and effec- 
tively. Let us be diverted by none of those sophistical 
controversies wherewith we are so industriously plied and 
belabored, — contrivances such as groping from some mid- 
dle ground between the right and the wrong, vain as the 
search for a man who should be neither a living man nor 



ADDRESS AT COOPER INSTITUTE 103 

a dead man ; such as a policy of " don't care " on a ques- 
tion abo,ut which all true men do care; such as Union 
appeals beseeching true Union men to yield to Disunion- 
ists, reversing the divine rule and calling not the sinners 
but the righteous to repentance; such as invocations to 
Washington, imploring men to unsay what Washington 
said and undo what Washington did. 

Neither let us be slandered from our duty by false ac- 
cusations against us, nor frightened from it by menaces of 
destruction to the government, nor of dungeons to our- 
selves. Let us have faith that right makes might, and in 
that faith let us to the end dare to do our duty as we 
understand it. 

Compare Lincoln's style in this speech with the style of his 
shorter masterpieces. 

Discuss the argumentative and persuasive value of the phrase 
" our fathers who framed the government under which we live." 
What evidence is furnished by this speech to show that Lin- 
coln was a shrewd debater? 

What effect would you expect this speech to have on an audi- 
ence in New York City in Lincoln's day? 

What is the significance of the expression " black Repub- 
lican "? 

Compare the " opposition " against which Lincoln contended 
with that encountered by earlier American orators. 

What circumstances in the situation entitle Lincoln to be 
called heroic because of his delivery of this speech? 

In what respects is the question discussed by Lincoln in this 
speech the same as that discussed by Webster in his Reply to 
Hayne? 

What were Lincoln's views concerning the constitutionality 
of slavery? 

In what respects was Lincoln, in this speech, conservative and 
in what respects revolutionary? 

How did this speech assist in extending and enlarging Amer- 
ica's conception of democracy? 



BRECKENRIDGE-BAKER DEBATE ON THE 

WAR 

August i, 1861 

This debate, it is said, produced the most dramatic 
scene that ever occurred in Congress. It took place in 
a period of deepest depression at the beginning of the 
Civil War, when the Confederacy was most defiant, 
and most successful. Although disaster had followed 
disappointment and the rebel army was but twenty 
miles from Washington, the war was being fought in 
an aimless and half-hearted way, for men with South- 
ern sympathies were still powerful in Congress. 

Such was the condition on August 1, 1861, when 
there was taken up for discussion the Insurrection and 
Sedition Bill, an act that provided for martial instead 
of civil law in such districts as were designated by 
the President as in a state of insurrection. On the 
day set for the debate, when it was learned that 
Senator Breckenridge of Kentucky was about to de- 
liver in opposition to this bill the speech he had been 
preparing, the Republican senators conferred as who 
should be selected to make the reply. They agreed 
that the task should be given to Baker, who at the time 
was drilling his regiment at the foot of Meridan Hill, 
about a mile from the Senate Chamber. 

On receiving the summons, Baker sprang at once 
into the saddle and without change of clothes rode to 
the Capitol. In his colonel's uniform he entered the 
eastern door while Breckenridge was still speaking. 

104 



DEBATE ON THE WAR 105 

Advancing to his seat, lie laid his sword across his 
desk and listened restlessly to the speech. As soon as 
the Senator from Kentucky had concluded, he sprang 
to the floor his face aglow with excitement. 

At the conclusion of his impromptu speech, he re- 
mounted his horse and rode back to his regiment. He 
died heroically a few weeks later at the battle of 
Ball's Bluff. Breckenridge became a major-general in 
the Confederate army, and finally was made secretary 
of war for the Confederate States. 



DEBATE OX THE WAR 

John C. Breckenridge 

Mr. President: Gentlemen talk about the Union as if 
it was an end instead of a means. They talk about it as if 
it was the Union of these states which alone had brought 
into life the principles of public and of personal liberty. 
Sir, they existed before, and they may survive it. Take 
care that in destroying one idea you do not destroy not 
only the Constitution of your country, but sever what re- 
mains of the Federal Union. These external and sacred 
principles of public men and of personal liberty, which 
lived before the Union and will live forever and ever 
somewhere, must be respected ; they cannot with im- 
punity be overthrown ; and if you force the people to the 
issue between any form of government and these priceless 
principles, that form of government will perish ; they will 
tear it asunder as the irrepressible forces of nature rend 
whatever opposes them. 

Mr. President, we are on the wrong tack; we have been 
from the beginning. The people begin to see it. Here we 



106 JOHN C. BRECKENRIDGE 

have been hurling gallant fellows on to death, and the 
blood of Americans has been shed — for what ? They have 
shown their prowess, respectively — that which belongs to 
the race — and shown it like men. But for what have the 
United States soldiers, according to the exposition we 
have here to-day, been shedding their blood and display- 
ing their dauntless courage? It has been to carry out 
principles that three-fourths of them abhor; for the prin- 
ciples contained in this bill and continually avowed on 
the floor of the Senate, are not shared, I venture to say, 
by one-fourth of the army. 

I have said, sir, that we are on the wrong tack. Noth- 
ing but ruin, utter ruin, to the North, to the South, to 
the East, to the West will follow the prosecution of this 
contest. You may look forward to countless treasures all 
spent for the purpose of desolating and ravaging this con- 
tinent; at the end leaving us just where we are now; or if 
the forces of the United States are successful in ravaging 
the whole South, what on earth will be done with it after 
that is accomplished? Are not gentlemen now perfectly 
satisfied that they have mistaken a people for a faction? 
Are they not perfectly satisfied that to accomplish their 
object, it is necessary to subjugate to conquer 1 — ay, to 
exterminate — nearly ten millions of people ? Do you not 
know it? Does not everybody know it? Does not the 
world know it ? 1 Let us pause, and let the Congress of 
the United States respond to the rising feeling all over 
this land in favor of peace. 2 War is separation; in the 
language of an eminent gentleman now no more, it is dis- 
union, eternal and final disunion. We have separation 
now; it is only made worse by war, and an utter extinc- 
tion of all those sentiments of common interest and feeling 
which might lead to political reunion founded upon con- 
sent and upon a conviction of its advantages. Let the 
war go on, however, and soon in addition to the moans 



DEBATE ON THE WAR 107 

of widows and orphans all over this land, you will hear 
the cry of distress from those who want food and the 
comforts of life. The people will he unahle to pay the 
grinding taxes which a fanatical spirit will attempt to 
impose upon them. Nay, more, sir; you will see further 
separation. The Pacific slope now, doubtless, is devoted 
to the union of states. Let this war go en till they find 
the burdens of taxation greater than the burdens of a 
separate condition, and they will assert it. Let the war 
go on until they see the beautiful features of the old 
Confederacy beaten out of shape and comeliness by the 
brutalizing hand of war, and they will turn aside in dis- 
gust from the sickening spectacle, and become a separate 
nation. Fight twelve months longer, and the already 
opening differences that you see between New England 
and the great Northwest will develop themselves. You 
have two confederacies now. Fight twelve months and 
you will have three; twelve months longer, and you will 
have four. 

I will not enlarge upon it, sir. I am quite aw^are that 
all I say is received with a sneer of incredulity 3 by the 
gentlemen who represent the far Northeast; but let the 
future determine who was right and who was wrong. 
We are making our record here; I, my humble one, amid 
the sneers and aversion of nearly all who surround me, 
giving my votes, and uttering my utterances according to 
my convictions, with but few approving voices, and sur- 
rounded by scowls. The time will soon come, Senators 
when history will put her final seal upon these proceed- 
ings, and if my name shall be recorded there, going along 
with yours as an actor in these scenes, I am willing to 
abide, fearlessly, her final judgment. 



108 EDWARD D. BAKER 

Edward D. Baker 

Mr. President : It has not been my fortune to participate 
in at any length, indeed, nor to hear very much of, the 
discussion which has been going on — more, I think, in the 
hands of the Senator from Kentucky than anybody else — 
upon all the propositions connected with this war ; and as 
I really feel as sincerely as he can an earnest desire to pre- 
serve the Constitution of the United States for everybody, 
South as well as North, I have listened for some little 
time past to what he has said with an earnest desire to 
apprehend the point of his objection to this particular bill. 
Mr. President, the honorable senator says there is a 
state of war. The Senator from Vermont 4 agrees with 
him ; or rather, he agrees with the Senator from Vermont 
in that. What then? There is a state of public war; 
none the less war because it is urged from the other side; 
not the less war because it is unjust; not the less war 
because it is a war of insurrection and rebellion. It is 
still war ; and I am willing to say it is public war, — public 
as contra-distinguished from private war. What then? 
Shall we carry that war on? Is it his duty as a senator 
to carry it on? If so, how? By armies under command; 
by military organization and authority, advancing to sup- 
press insurrection and rebellion. Is that wrong? Is that 
unconstitutional? Are we not bound to do, with who- 
ever levies war against us, as we would do if he were a 
foreigner? There is no distinction as to the mode of 
carrying on war; we carry on war against an advancing 
army just the same whether it be from Russia or from 
South Carolina. Will the honorable senator tell me it is 
our duty to stay here, within fifteen miles of the enemy 
seeking to advance upon us every hour, and talk about 
nice questions of constitutional construction as to whether 
it is war or merely insurrection? No, sir. It is our 



DEBATE ON THE WAR 109 

duty to advance, if we can ; to suppress insurrection ; to 
put down rebellion; to dissipate the rising; to scatter the 
enemy ; and when we have done so, to preserve, in the 
terms of the bill, the liberty, lives, and property of the 
people of the country, by just and fair police regulations. 

I agree that we ought to do all that we can to limit, to 
restrain, to fetter the abuse of military power. Bayonets 
are at best illogical arguments. I am not willing, ex- 
cept as a case of sheerest necessity, ever to permit a mili- 
tary commander to exercise authority over life, liberty, and 
property. But, sir, it is part of the law of war; you 
cannot carry in the rear of your army your courts; you 
cannot organize juries; you cannot have trials according 
to the forms and ceremonial of the common law amid the 
clangor of arms; and somebody must enforce police regu- 
lations in a conquered or occupied district. I ask the 
Senator from Kentucky again respectfully, is that uncon- 
stitutional ; or if in the nature of war it must exist, even 
if there be no law passed by us to allow it, is it uncon- 
stitutional to regulate it? That is the question, to which 
I do not think he will make clear and distinct reply. 

I confess, Mr. President, that I would not have pre- 
dicted three weeks ago the disasters which have overtaken 
our arms; and I do not think (if I were to predict now) 
that six months hence the senator will indulge in the same 
tone of prediction which is his favorite key now. I would 
ask him what would you have us do now — a Confederate 
army within twenty miles of us, advancing or threatening 
to advance, to overwhelm our government; to shake the 
pillars of the Union; to bring it round your head, if you 
stay here, in ruins? Are we to stop and talk about an 
uprising sentiment in the North against the war? Are we 
to predict evil, and retire from what we predict? Is it 
not the manly part to go on as we have begun, to raise 
money, and levy armies, to organize them, to prepare to 



no EDWARD D. BAKER 

advance; when we do advance, to regulate that advance 
by all the laws and regulations that civilization and 
humanity will allow in time of battle? Can we do any- 
thing more ? To talk to us about stopping is idle ; we will 
never stop. Will the senator yield to rebellion? Will 
he shrink from armed insurrection? Will his state 
justify it? Will its better public opinion allow it? Shall 
we send a flag of truce? What would he have? Or 
would he conduct this war so feebly, that the whole world 
would smile at us in derision? What would he have? 
These speeches of his, sown broadcast over the land, what 
clear distinct meaning have they? Are they not intended 
for disorganization in our very midst? Are they not 
intended to dull our weapons? Are they not intended to 
destroy our zeal? Are they not intended to animate our 
enemies? Sir, are they not words of brilliant, polished 
treason, even in the very Capitol of the Confederacy ? 5 

I tell the senator that his predictions, sometimes for 
the South, sometimes for the Middle States, sometimes 
for the Northeast, and then wandering away in airy 
visions out to the far Pacific, about the dread of our 
people, as for loss of blood and treasure, provoking them 
to disloyalty, are false in sentiment, false in fact, and 
false in loyalty. The Senator from Kentucky is mistaken 
in them all. Five hundred million dollars. What then? 
Great Britain gave more than two thousand million in 
the great battle for constitutional liberty which she led 
at one time almost single-handed against the world. 
Five hundred thousand men. What then? We have 
them; they are ours; they are the children of the country. 
They belong to the whole country ; they are our sons ; our 
kinsmen ; and there are many of us who will give them all 
up before we will abate one word of our just demand, or 
retreat one inch from the line which divides right from 
wrong. 



DEBATE ON THE WAR in 

Sir, it is not a question of men or of money in that 
sense. All the money, all the men, are, in our judgment, 
well bestowed in such a cause. When we give them, we 
know their value. Knowing their value well,* we give 
them with the more pride and the more joy. Sir, how 
can we retreat? Sir, how can we make peace? Who 
shall treat? What commissioners? Who would go? 
Upon what terms? Where is to be your boundary line? 
Where the end of the principles we shall have 
to give up? What will become of our consti- 
tutional government? What will become of pub- 
lic liberty? What of past glories? What of 
future hopes? Shall we sink into the insignificance of 
the grave — a degraded, defeated, emasculated people, 
frightened by the results of one battle, and scared at 
the visions raised upon this floor by the imagination of the 
Senator from Kentucky? Xo, sir; a thousand times, no, 
sir. We will rally — if. indeed, our words be necessary — 
we will rally the people, the loyal people, of the whole 
country. They will pour forth their treasure, their money, 
their men, without stint, without measure. The most 
peaceable man in this body may stamp his foot upon this 
Senate Chamber floor, as of old a warrior and a senator 
did, and from that single stamp there will spring forth 
armed legions. 

Shall one battle determine the fate of an empire? or 
the loss of one thousand men or twenty thousand, or 
$100,000,000 or $500,000,000? In a year's peace, in 
ten years at most, of peaceful progress we can restore 
them all. There will be some graves reeking with blood 
watered by the tears of affection. There will be some 
privation; there will be some loss of luxury; there will 
be somewhat more need for labor to procure the neces- 
saries of life. When that is said, all is said. If we have 
the country, the whole country, the Union, the Constitu- 



ii2 EDWARD D. BAKER 

tion, free government — with these there will return all 
the blessings of well-ordered civilization; the path of the 
country will be a career of greatness and of glory such as, 
in the olden time, our fathers saw in the dim visions of 
years yet to come, and such as would have been ours to- 
day, if it had not been for the treason for which the 
senator too often seeks to apologize. 

Why did Breckenridge's speech arouse sneers of incredulity? 

Do you think that Breckenridge was sincere in his appeal to 
the future? 

What was the political advantage that Breckenridge hoped to 
attain by remaining a member of the Federal Congress? 

Who during recent war followed in the footsteps of Brecken- 
ridge and acted his part? 

To what extent was Baker's dramatic entrance responsible 
for the effect of his speech? 

Comment on Baker's transition from polite questioning to 
impassioned denunciation. 

Comment on the argumentative and persuasive effect of 
Baker's failure to dispute his opponent's estimate of loss of 
men and property. 

Compare the motives appealed to by Breckenridge with those 
to which Baker appealed. 

Contrast the style of the two men. Is it the result of charac- 
ter and training? 

What seems to be Baker's controlling purpose in delivering 
this speech? 



THE TRENT AFFAIR 

December 4, 1861 

When war was declared in America the sympathy of 
the ruling and influential classes of people in England 
was largely with the South. The aristocracy of 
Britain thought they saw in the fight the struggle of 
conservative and established government against the 
demagogic champions of democracy. In the House of 
Commons, Mr. Roebuck, a member for Sheffield, had 
brought forward a motion in favor of the recognition 
of the South. He said : " The men of the South are 
Englishmen; but the army of the North is composed 
of the scum of Europe." Even those who possessed 
democratic sentiments and who were opposed to sla- 
very were slow to show T their sympathy with the 
North, for it was maintained that the success of the 
Confederacy would promote England's economic we- 
fare. 

While public sentiment in Great Britain was in this 
condition an event occurred in November, 1861, that 
nearly led to war between England and the United 
States. The Confederate government sent two envoys 
from Havana to England and France in the British 
mail steamer Trent. The ship was stopped by the 
U. S. sloop of war San Jacinto, commanded by Cap- 
tain Wilkes, and the envoys were seized and im- 
prisoned in a fort in Boston harbor. The affair raised 
a storm of indignation in England. Lord Russell, the 
Foreign Secretary, demanded from Secretary Seward 
the immediate release of the prisoners. 

113 



ii4 JOHN BRIGHT 

Under these circumstances, and while meetings 
advocating- war were being held in many places in 
England, Bright delivered this address at Rochdale on 
December 4, 1861. He succeeded in stemming the 
tide of exasperation and in inducing the Engish na- 
tion to consider the affair calmly and sympathetically. 
As he predicted in his speech, the American govern- 
ment acknowledged the justice of the English claim 
and released the prisoners. But even then war was 
narrowly averted, for, Lord Palmerston, the Prime 
Minister, was inclined to follow up the matter. He 
was finally restrained through the influence of Queen 
Victoria and by the public sentiment aroused by Bright. 
England never recognized the Southern Confederacy; 
the most that the South ever obtained was the acknowl- 
edgement of its rights as a belligerent. 



THE TRENT AFFAIR 

John Bright 

Eighty-five years ago, at the time when some of our 
oldest townsmen were very little children, there were, on 
the North American continent, colonies, mainly of Eng- 
lishmen, containing about three millions of souls. These 
colonies we have seen a year ago constituting the 
United States of North America, and compris- 
ing a population of no less than thirty millions of 
souls. We know that in agriculture and manu- 
factures, with the exception of this kingdom, there 
is no country in the world which in these arts 
may be placed in advance of the United States. With 
regard to inventions, I believe, within the last thirty 
years, we have received more useful inventions from the 



THE TRENT AFFAIR 115 

United States than from all the other countries of the 
earth. In that country there are probably ten times as 
many miles of telegraph as there are in this country, and 
there are at least five or six times as many miles of rail- 
way. The tonnage of its shipping is at least equal to ours, 
if it does not exceed ours. The prisons of that country — 
for, even in countries the most favored, prisons are need- 
ful — have been models for other nations of the earth ; 
and many European governments have sent missions at 
different times to inquire into the admirable system of 
education so universally adopted in their free schools 
throughout the Northern States. 

This is a very 7 fine, but a very true picture; yet it has 
another side to which I must advert. There has been 
one great feature in that country 7 , one great contrast, 
which has been pointed to by all who have commented 
upon the United States as a feature of danger, as a con- 
trast calculated to give pain. There has been in that 
country the utmost liberty to the white man, and bondage 
and degradation to the black man. Now rely upon it, 
that wherever Christianity lives and flourishes, there must 
grow up from it, necessarily, a conscience hostile to any 
oppression and to any wrong; and, therefore, from the 
hour when the United States Constitution was formed, 
so long as it left there this great evil — then comparatively 
small, but now -so great — it left there seeds of that which 
an American statesman has so happily described of that 
" irrepressible conflict " of which now the whole world 
is the witness. It has been a common thing for men dis- 
posed to carp at the United States to point to this blot 
upon their fair fame, and to compare it with the boasted 
declaration of freedom in their Deed and Declaration of 
Independence. 

I will not discuss the guilt of the men who, ministers 
of a great nation only last year, conspired to overthrow it. 



n6 JOHN BRIGHT 

I will not point out or recapitulate the statements of the 
fraudulent manner in which they disposed of the funds in 
the national exchequer. I will not point out by name 
any of the men, in this conspiracy, whom history will des- 
ignate by titles they would not like to hear; but I say 
that slavery has sought to break up the most free govern- 
ment in the world, and to found a new State, in the nine- 
teenth century, whose corner-stone is the perpetual bond- 
age of millions of men. 

It has been said, " How much better it would be " — 
not for the United States, but — " for us, that these States 
should be divided.'' I recollect meeting a gentleman in 
Bond Street one day before the session was over. He was 
a rich man and one whose voice is much heard in the 
House of Commons; but his voice is not heard when he 
is on his legs, but when he is cheering other speakers; 
and he said to me: " After all, this is a sad business about 
the United States; but I think it very much better that 
they should be split up. In twenty years " — or in fifty, 
I forget which it was — " they will be so powerful that 
they will bully all Europe." And a distinguished member 
of the House of Commons — distinguished there by his 
eloquence, distinguished more by his many writings — I 
mean Sir Edward Buhver Lytton — he did not exactly ex- 
press a hope, but he ventured on something like a predic- 
tion, that the time would come when there would be, I 
do not know how many, but about as many independent 
States on the American continent as you can count upon 
your fingers. 

There can not be a meaner motive than this I am 
speaking of, in forming a judgment on this question: that 
it is " better for us " — for whom? the people of England, 
or the government of England? — that the United States 
should be severed, and that the North American continent 
should be as the continent of Europe is in many States, 



THF TRENT AFFAIR 117 

and subject to all the contentions and disasters which have 
accompanied the history of the states of Furope. I should 
Bay that, if a man had a great heart within him, he would 
rather look forward to the day, when, from that point 
of land which is habitable nearest to the Pole, to the shores 
of the Great Gulf, the whole of that vast continent might 
become one great confederation of States — without a great 
army, and without a great navy — not mixing itself up 
with the entanglements of European politics — wnthout a 
custom house inside, through the whole length and breadth 
of its territory — and with freedom everywhere, equality 
everywhere, law everywhere, peace everywhere; such a 
confederation would afford at least some hope that man is 
not forsaken of Heaven, and that the future of our race 
may be better than the past. 

Now I am obliged to say — and I say it with the utmost 
pain — that if we have not done things that are plainly 
hostile to the North, and if we have not expressed affec- 
tion for slavery, and, outwardly and openly, hatred for the 
Union — I say that there has not been that friendly and 
cordial neutrality, which, if I had been a citizen of the 
United States, I should have expected ; and I say further, 
that, if there has existed considerable irritation at that, it 
must be taken as a measure of the high appreciation which 
the people of those States place upon the opinion of the 
people of England. 

But there has occurred an event which was announced 
to us only a week ago, which is one of great importance, 
and it may be one of some peril. It is asserted that what 
is called " international law " has been broken by the 
seizure of the Southern commissioners on board an Eng- 
lish trading steamer by a steamer of war of the United 
States. 

Now, the act which has been committed by the Ameri- 
can steamer, in my opinion, whether it was legal or not, 



n8 JOHN BRIGHT 

was both impolitic and bad. That is my opinion. I 
think it may turn out, almost certainly, that, so far as the 
taking of those men from that ship was concerned, it was 
an act wholly unknown to, and unauthorized by, the 
American government. And if the American government 
believe, on the opinion of their law officers, that the act is 
illegal, I have no doubt they will make fitting reparation ; 
for there is no government in the world that has so 
strenuously insisted upon modifications of international 
law, and has been so anxious to be guided always by the 
most moderate and merciful interpretation of that law. 

Now, our great advisers of the Times newspaper have 
been persuading people that this is merely one of a series 
of acts which denote the determination of the Washing- 
ton government to pick a quarrel with the people of Eng- 
land. Did you ever know anybody who was not very 
nearly dead drunk, who, having as much upon his hands 
as he could manage, would offer to fight everybody about 
him? Do you believe that the United States government 
presided over by President Lincoln, so constitutional in 
all his acts, so moderate as he has been — representing at 
this moment that great party in the United States, hap- 
pily now in the ascendancy, which has always been espe- 
cially in favor of peace, and especially friendly to Eng- 
land — do you believe that such a government, having now 
upon its hands an insurrection of the most formidable 
character in the South, would invite the armies and the 
fleets of England to combine with that insurrection, and, 
it might be, to render it impossible that the Uunion should 
ever again be restored? I say, that single statement, 
whether it came from a public writer or a public speaker, 
is enough to stamp him forever with the character of 
being an insidious enemy of both countries. 

What can be more monstrous than that we, as we call 
ourselves, to some extent, an educated, a moral, and a 



THE TRENT AFFAIR 119 

Christian nation — at a moment when an accident of this 
kind occurs, before we have made a representation to the 
American government, before we have heard a word from 
it in reply — should be all up in arms, 1 every sword leap- 
ing from its scabbard, and every man looking about for 
his pistols and his blunderbusses? I think the conduct 
pursued — and I have no doubt just the same is pursued 
by a certain class in America — is much more the conduct 
of savages than of Christian and civilized men. No, let 
us be calm. You recollect how we were dragged into 
the Russian w T ar — how we " drifted " into it. You know 
that I, at least, have not upon my head any of the guilt 
of that fearful war. You know that it cost one hundred 
millions of money to this country ; that it cost at least the 
lives of forty thousand Englishmen; that it disturbed 
your trade; that it nearly doubled the armies of Europe; 
that it placed the relations of Europe on a much less peace- 
ful footing than before; and that it did not effect one 
single thing of all those that it was promised to effect. 

Now, then, before I sit down, let me ask you what is 
this people, about which so many men in England at this 
moment are writing, and speaking, and thinking, with 
harshness, I think with injustice, if not with great bitter- 
ness? Two centuries ago, multitudes of the people of 
this country found a refuge on the North American con- 
tinent, escaping from the tyranny of the Stuarts and from 
the bigotry of Laud. Many noble spirits from our coun- 
try made great experiments in favor of human freedom 
on that continent. Bancroft, the great historian of his 
own country, has said, in his own graphic and emphatic 
language, " The history of the colonization of America 
is the history of the crimes of Europe." 

At this very moment, then, there are millions in the 
United States who personally, or whose immediate parents 
have at one time been citizens of this country. They have 



iao JOHN BRIGHT 

found a home in the Far West ; they subdued the wilder- 
ness; they met with plenty there, which was not afforded 
them in their native country; and they have become a 
great people. There may be persons in England who are 
jealous of those States. There may be men who dislike 
democracy, and who hate a republic; there may be even 
those whose sympathies warm toward the slave oligarchy 
of the South. But of this I am certain, that only mis- 
representation the most gross, or calumny the most wicked 
can sever the tie which unites the great mass of the people 
of this country with their friends and brethren beyond the 
Atlantic. 

Now, whether the Union will be restored or not, or 
the South achieve an unhonored independence or not, I 
know not, and I predict not. But this I think I know — 
that in a few years, a very few years, the twenty millions 
of freemen in the North will be thirty millions, or even 
fifty millions — a population equal to or exceeding that of 
this kingdom. When that time comes, I pray that it may 
not be said among them, that in the darkest hour of their 
country's trials, England, the land of their fathers, looked 
on with icy coldness and saw, unmoved, the perils and 
calamities of their children. As for me, I have but this 
to say : I am but one in this audience, and but one in the 
citizenship of this country; but if all other tongues are 
silent, 2 mine shall speak for that policy which gives hope 
to the bondmen of the South, and which tends to generous 
thoughts, and generous words, and generous deeds, be- 
tween the two great nations who speak the English lan- 
guage, and from their origin are alike entitled to the 
English name. 

How do you account for the fact that at the beginning of the 
Civil War the sympathy of most Englishmen was with the 
South? 

What considerations, whether urged by Bright, Beecher, or 



THE TRENT AFFAIR 121 

others, caused England's sympathy gradually to swing over to 
the North? 

Was Bright's estimate of America a just one? 

What does the temper of B right's speech imply concerning 
the character of the British public and his audience? 

What reception did his speech receive in England? 

Compare Bright's "if all other tongues were silent" with a 
similar emotional appeal made by Patrick Henry. 

Discuss President Lincoln's attitude toward the Trent Affair. 

How was the Affair finally adjusted? 



BEECHER'S SPEECH AT LIVERPOOL 

October 16, 1863 

Although Bright had been able to prevent England 
from entering the war in behalf of the Southern Con- 
federacy he had not been able to do away with all 
antagonism toward the North. Sentiment in the 
manufacturing districts of England and generally 
among the working and business classes, was with 
the South when Beecher delivered his address in Liver- 
pool on October 16, 1863. Lack of cotton and the 
closing of Southern markets to English goods had 
brought no little distress to the poorer people. It 
was Beecher's task to try to win over to the side of 
the North the moral support of those whose economic 
welfare seemed to depend on the success of the South. 

When it was announced that he was to speak in 
Liverpool, the mob-spirit of the community was 
aroused and the opposition was organized to make a 
determined and desperate attempt to prevent the de- 
livery of the speech. The streets were placarded with 
abusive and scurrilous posters urging Englishmen to 
" see that he gets the welcome that he deserves." The 
leading papers published editorial articles attacking 
Mr. Beecher. It was openly declared that if he at- 
tempted to address the meeting he would never leave 
Liverpool alive. 

On the evening of the 16th the great hall was packed 
with enemies and with sympathizers. When Mr. 
Beecher came upon the platform there were cat-calls 

122 



SPEECH AT LIVERPOOL 123 

and cheers for several minutes, and the chairman with 
great difficuty obtained the opportunity to introduce 
the speaker. The tumult continued for three hours 
excepting the few brief intervals when Mr. Beecher 
succeeded 'in obtaining the involuntary attention of 
his audience. Laughter, shouts, hisses, and insults 
continually interrupted the delivery of the address. 
On at least two occasions men were carried forcibly 
from the hall. Nevertheless, Mr. Beecher was able, 
in spite of all opposition, to create with his audience an 
impression that was of great benefit to the cause of 
the North; and the published report of his address, 
which the next day was spread all over England, be- 
came one of the important influences that led Great 
Britain to decide finally against lending her assistance 
to the Confederacy. 



SPEECH AT LIVERPOOL 

Hexry Ward Beecher 

For more than twenty-five years I have been made per- 
fectly familiar with popular assemblies in all parts of my 
country except the extreme South. There has not for the 
whole of that time been a single day of my life when it 
would have been safe for me to go south of Mason and 
Dixon's line ■ in my own country, and all for one reason: 
my solemn, earnest, persistent testimony against that 
which I consider to be the most atrocious thing under the 
sun — the system of American slavery in a great free re- 
public. [Cheers.] I have passed through that early 
period when right of free speech was denied to me. Again 
and again I have attempted to address audiences that, for 
no other crime than that of free speech, visited me with 



i2 4 HENRY WARD BEECHER 

all manner of contumelious epithets; and now since I 
have been in England, although I have met with greater 
kindness and courtesy on the part of most than I deserved, 
yet, on the other hand, I perceive that the Southern in- 
fluence prevails to some extent in England.. [Applause 
and uproar.] It is my old acquaintance; I understand it 
perfectly — [laughter] — and I have always held it to be an 
unfailing truth that where a man had a cause that would 
bear examination he was perfectly willing to have it 
spoken about. [Applause.] And when in Manchester 
I saw those huge placards: "Who is Henry Ward 
Beecher?" — [laughter, cries of "Quite right," and ap- 
plause] — and when in Liverpool I was told that there 
were those blood-red placards, purporting to say what 
Henry Ward Beecher had said, and calling upon English- 
men to suppress free speech — I tell you what I thought. 
I thought simply this: " I am glad of it." [Laughter.] 
Why? Because if they had felt perfectly secure, that you 
are the minions of the South and the slaves of slavery, 
they would have been perfectly still. [Applause and 
uproar.] And, therefore, when I saw so much nervous 
apprehension that, if I were permitted to speak — [hisses 
and applause] — when I found they were afraid to have 
me speak — [hisses, laughter, and "No, no!"] — when I 
found that they considered my speaking damaging to their 
cause — [applause] — when I found that they appealed 
from facts and reasonings to mob law — [applause and 
uproar] — I said, no man need tell me what the heart and 
secret counsel of these men are. They tremble and are 
afraid. [Applause, laughter, hisses, "No, No!" and a 
voice: "New York mob."] Now, personally, it is a 
matter of very little consequence to me whether I speak 
here to-night or not. [Laughter and cheers.] But, one 
thing is very certain, if you do permit me to speak here 
to-night you will hear very plain talking. [Applause and 



SPEECH AT LIVERPOOL 125 

hisses.] You will not find a man — [interruption] — you 
will not find me to be a man that dared to speak about 
Great Britain three thousand miles off, and then is afraid 
to speak to Great Britain when he stands on her shores. 
[Immense applause and hisses.] And if I do not mistake 
the tone and temper of Englishmen, they had rather have 
a man who opposes them in a manly way — [applause from 
all parts of the hall] — than a sneak that agrees with them 
in an unmanly way. [Applause and " Bravo! "] Now, 
if I can carry you with me by sound convictions, I shall 
be immensely glad — [applause] — ; but if I cannot carry 
you with me by facts and sound arguments, I do not wish 
you to go with me at all; and all that I ask is simply 
fair play. [Applause, and a voice: " You shall have 
it, too."] 

Those of you who are kind enough to wish to favor 
my speaking — and you will observe that my voice is 
slightly husky, from having spoken almost every night in 
succession for some time past, — those who wish to hear 
me will do me the kindness simply to sit still, and to keep 
still — and I and my friends the Secessionists will make all 
the noise. [Laughter.] 

Wherever a nation that is crushed, cramped, degraded 
under despotism is struggling to be free, you — Leeds, 
Sheffield, Manchester, Paisley — all have an interest that 
that nation should be free. When depressed and back- 
ward people demand that they may have a chance to rise 
— Hungary, Italy, Poland — it is a duty for humanity's 
sake, it is a duty for the highest moral motives, to sym- 
pathize with them ; but besides all these there is a material 
and an interested reason why you should sympathize with 
them. Pounds and pence join with conscience and with 
honor in this design. Now, Great Britain's chief want is 
— what? 

They have said that your chief want is cotton. I deny 



126 HENRY WARD BEECHER 

it. Your chief want is consumers. [Applause and hisses.] 
You have got skill, you have got capital, and you have 
got machinery enough to manufacture goods for the whole 
population of the globe. You could turn out fourfold 
as much as you do, if you only had the market to sell in. 
It is not so much the want, therefore, of fabric, though 
there may be a temporary obstruction of it; but the prin- 
cipal and increasing want — increasing from year to year 
— is, where shall we find men to buy what we can manu- 
facture so fast? [Interruption, and a voice, " The Mor- 
rill tariff," 2 and applause.] Before the American war 
broke out, your warehouses were loaded with goods that 
you could not sell. [Applause and hisses.] You had 
over-manufactured; what is the meaning of over-manu- 
facturing but this: that you had skill, capital, machinery, 
to create faster than you had customers to take goods off 
your hands? And you know that rich as Great Britain is, 
vast as are her manufactures, if she could have fourfold 
the present demand, she could make fourfold riches to- 
morrow; and every political economist will tell you that 
your want is not cotton primarily, but customers. There- 
fore, the doctrine, how to make customers, is a great deal 
more important to Great Britain than the doctrine how 
to raise cotton. It is to that doctrine I ask from you, 
business men, practical men, men of fact, sagacious Eng- 
lishmen — to that point I ask a moment's attention. 
[Shouts of " Oh, oh! " hisses, and applause.] There are 
no more continents to be discovered. [Hear, hear!] 
The market of the future must be found — how? There 
is very little hope of any more demand being created bv 
new fields. If you are to have a better market there 
must be some kind of process invented to make the old 
fields better. [A voice, " Tell us something new," shouts 
of " Order," and interruption.] Let us look at it, then. 
You must civilize the world in order to make a better 



SPEECH AT LIVERPOOL 127 

class of purchasers. [Interruption.] If you were to press 
Italy down again under the feet of despotism, Italy, dis- 
couraged, could draw but very few supplies from you. 
But £i've her liberty, kindle schools throughout her valleys, 
spur her industry, make treaties with her by which she 
can exchange her wine, and her oil, and her silk for your 
manufactured goods; and for every effort that you make 
in that direction there will come back profit to you by 
increased traffic with her. [Loud applause.] If Hungary 
asks to be an unshackled nation — if by freedom she will 
rise in virtue and intelligence, then by freedom she will 
acquire a more multifarious industry, which she will be 
willing to exchange for your manufactures. Her liberty 
is to be found — where? You will find it in the Word 
of God, you will find it in the code of history; but you 
will also find it in the Price Current [Hear, hear!] ; and 
every free nation, every civilized people — every people 
that rises from barbarism to industry and intelligence, be- 
comes a better customer. Now, there is in this a great and 
sound principle of political economy. [" Yah, yah ! " from 
the passage outside the hall, and loud laughter.] If the 
South should be rendered independent — [at this juncture 
mingled cheering and hissing became immense; half the 
audience rose to their feet, waving hats and handkerchiefs, 
and in every part of the hall there was the greatest com- 
motion and uproar.] Well, you have had your turn now; 
now let me have mine again. [Loud applause and laugh- 
ter.] It is a little inconvenient to talk against the wind; 
but after all, if you will just keep good-natured — I am not 
going to lose my temper; will you watch yours? [Ap- 
plause.] Besides all that, it rests me, and gives me a 
chance, you know, to get my breath. [Applause and 
hisses.] And I think that the bark of those men is worse 
than their bite. They do not mean any harm — they don't 
know any better. [Loud laughter, applause, hisses, and 



128 HENRY WARD BEECHER 

continued uproar.] I was saying, when these responses 
broke in, that it was worth our while to consider both 
alternatives. What will be the result if this present strug- 
gle shall eventuate in the separation of America, and 
making the South — [loud applause, hisses, hooting, and 
cries of " Bravo! "] — a slave territory exclusively — [cries 
of " No, no! " and laughter] — and the North a free ter- 
ritory, — what will be the first result? You will lay 
the foundation for carrying the slave population clear 
through to the Pacific Ocean. This is the first step. 
There is not a man that has been a leader of the South 
any time within these twenty years that has not had this 
for a plan. It was for this that Texas was invaded, first 
by colonists, next by marauders, until it w^as wrested from 
Mexico. It was for this that they engaged in the Mexi- 
can War itself, by w-hich the vast territory reaching to the 
Pacific was added to the Union. Never for a moment 
have they given up the plan of spreading the American 
institutions, as they call them, straight through toward 
the West, until the slave, who has washed his feet in the 
Atlantic, shall be carried to wash them in the Pacific. 
[Cries of " Question," and uproar.] There! I have got 
that statement out, and you cannot put it back. [Laugh- 
ter and applause.] Now, let us consider the prospect. 
If the South becomes a slave empire, what relation will it 
have to you as a customer? [A voice: " Or any other 
man." Laughter.] It would be an empire of twelve 
millions of people. Now, of these, eight millions are 
white, and four millions black. [A voice: " How many 
have you got? " Applause and laughter. Another voice: 
" Free your own slaves!"] Consider that one-third of 
the whole are the miserably poor, unbuying blacks. [Cries 
of " No, no! " " Yes, yes! " and interruption.] You do 
not manufacture much for them. [Hisses, "Oh!" 
"No!"] You have not got machinery coarse enough. 



SPEECH A i LI\ ERPOOL 129 

ighter, and " No."] Your labor is too skilled by far 
to manufacture bagging and linsey-woolsey. [A South- 
erner: " We are going to free them, every one."] Then 
you and I agree exactly. [Laughter.] One other third 
consists of a poor, unskilled, degraded white population ; 
and the remaining one-third, which is a large allowance, 
we will say, intelligent and rich. 

Now here are twelve million of people, and only one- 
third of them are customers that can afford to buy the 
kind of goods that you bring to market. [Interruption 
and uproar.] My friends, I saw a man once, who was 
a little late at a railway station, chase an express train. 
He did not catch it. [Laughter.] If you are going to 
stop this meeting, you have got to stop it before I speak; 
for after I have got the things out, you may chase as long 
as you please — you would not catch them. [Laughter 
and interruption.] But there is luck in leisure; I am 
going to take it easy. [Laughter.] Two-thirds of the 
population of the Southern States to-day are non- 
purchasers of English goods. [A voice: " No, they are 
not;" "No, no! n and uproar.] Now you must recollect 
another fact — namely, that this is going on clear through 
to the Pacific Ocean ; and if by sympathy or help you 
establish a slave empire, you sagacious Britons — [" Oh, 
oh!" and hooting] — if you like it better, then, I will 
leave the adjective out — [laughter, Hear! and applause] 
— are busy in favoring the establishment of an empire 
from ocean to ocean that should have fewest customers 
and the largest non-buying population. [Applause, " No, 
no! " A voice: " I thought it was the happy people that 
populated fastest."] 

Now, what can England make for the poor white popu- 
lation of such a future empire, and for her slave popula- 
tion? What carpets, what linens, what cottons can you 
sell them? What machines, what looking-glasses, what 



130 HENRY WARD BEECHER 

combs, what leather, what books, what pictures, what 
engravings? [A voice: "We'll sell them ships."] You 
may sell ships to a few, but what ships can you sell to 
two-thirds of the population of poor whites and blacks? 
[Applause.] A little bagging and a little linsey-woolsey, 
a few whips and manacles, are all that you can sell for the 
slave. [Great applause and uproar.] This very day, in 
the slave States of America there are eight millions out 
of twelve millions that are not, and cannot be your cus- 
tomers from the very laws of trade. [A voice: "Then 
how are they clothed?" and interruption.] 

There is another fact that I wish to allude to — not for 
the sake of reproach or blame, but by way of claiming 
your more lenient consideration — and that is, that slavery 
was entailed upon us by your action. [Hear, hear!] 
Against the earnest protests of the colonists the then gov- 
ernment of Great Britain — I will concede not knowing 
what were the mischiefs — ignorantly, but in point of fact, 
forced slave traffic on the unwilling colonists. [Great 
uproar, in the midst of which one individual was lifted 
up and carried out of the room amid cheers and hisses.] 

I do not ask that you should justify slavery in us, 
because it was wrong in you two hundred years ago ; but 
having ignorantly been the means of fixing it upon us, 
now that we are struggling with mortal struggles to free 
ourselves from it, we have a right to your tolerance, your 
patience, and charitable constructions. 

No man can unveil the future; no man can tell what 
revolutions are about to break upon the world; no man 
can tell what destiny belongs to France, nor to any of the 
European powers; but one thing is certain, that in the 
exigencies of the future there will be combinations and 
recombinations, and that those combinations that are of 
the same faith, the same blood, and the same substantial 
interests, ought not to be alienated from each other, but 



SPEECH AT LIVERPOOL 131 

ought to stand together. [Immense cheering and hisses.] 
I do not say that you ought not to be in the most friendly 
alliance with France or with Germany; but I do say 
that your own children, the offspring of England, ought 
to be nearer to you than any people of strange tongue. 
[A voice: " Degenerate sons," applause and hisses; an- 
other voice: "What about the Trent?"]. If there had 
been any feelings of bitterness in America, let me tell you 
that they had been excited, rightly or w r rongly, under 
the impression that Great Britain was going to intervene 
between us and our own lawful struggle. [A voice: 
" No! " and applause.] With the evidence that there is 
no such intention all bitter feelings will pass away. [Ap- 
plause.] We do not agree with the recent doctrine of 
neutrality 3 as a question of law. But it is past, and we 
are not disposed to raise that question. We accept it now 
as a fact, and we say that the utterance of Lord Russell 4 
at Blairgowrie — [applause, hisses, and a voice: "What 
about Lord Brougham? "] — together with the declaration 
of the government in stopping war-steamers here — ■ 
[great uproar, and applause] — has gone far toward quiet- 
ing every fear and removing every apprehension from 
our minds. [Uproar and shouts of applause.] And now 
in the future it is the work of every good man and patriot 
not to create divisions, but to do the things that will 
make for peace. ["Oh, oh!" and laughter.] On our 
part it shall be done. [Applause and hisses, and " No, 
No! " On your part it ought to be done; and when in 
any of the convulsions that come upon the world, Great 
Britain finds herself struggling single-handed against the 
gigantic powers that spread oppression and darkness — 
[Applause, hisses, and uproar] — there ought to be such 
cordiality that she can turn and say to her first-born and 
most illustrious child, " Come! " [Hear, hear! applause, 
tremendous cheers, and uproar.] I will not say that 



i 3 2 HENRY WARD BEECHER 

England cannot again, as hitherto, single-handed manage 
any power — [applause and uproar] — but I will say that 
England and America together for religion and liberty — 
[A voice: " Soap, soap," uproar, and great applause] — 
are a match for the world. [Applause; a voice: " They 
don't want any more soft soap/'] Now, gentlemen and 
ladies — [A voice: " Sam Slick," and another voice: 
" Ladies and gentlemen, if you please "] — when I came 
I was asked whether I would answer questions, and I 
very readily consented to do so, as I had in other places; 
but I will tell you it was because I expected to have the 
opportunity of speaking with some sort of ease and quiet. 
[A voice: "So you have."] I have for an hour and a 
half spoken against a storm 5 — [Hear, hear!] — and you 
yourselves are witnesses that, by the interruption, I have 
been obliged to strive with my voice, 6 so that I no longer 
have the power to control this assembly. [Applause.] 
And although I am in spirit perfectly willing to answer 
any question, and more than glad of the chance, yet I 
am by this very unnecessary opposition to-night incapaci- 
tated physically from doing it. Ladies and gentlemen, I 
bid you good-evening. 



Why did the announcement that Mr. Beecher was to speak 
in Liverpool meet with intense opposition? 

How can you account for the fact that an audience that had 
assembled presumably to hear Beecher speak seemed so unwill- 
ing to listen? 

What means did Beecher take to gain the sympathy of his 
audience? 

Was Beecher successful in gaining the attention of his Liver- 
pool audience? 

Do you think Beecher, in spite of the uproar against which 
he strove to speak, accomplished anything of value that night? 

Do you think that Beecher delivered this speech approxi- 
mately in the form that he outlined before he came to the hall? 

Can you find an instance in his speech where Beecher changed 



SPEECH AT LIVERPOOL 133 

the conclusion of a sentence so as to turn the laugh on oppo- 
nents who had interrupted him? 

When Beecher said that England might say to her first-born 
child, 4i Come," do you suppose he had in mind such an emerg- 
ency as the Great War? 

What had Beecher hoped to accomplish in his English ad- 
dresses, and to what extent was he successful? 



LINCOLN'S SPEECH AT GETTYSBURG 

November 19, 1863 

At Gettysburg, July 1, 2, and 3, General Meade and 
the Federal army brought to an end the long series of 
Northern defeats that had culminated in the alarming 
disasters at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville. 
Gettysburg was the turning point in the Civil War. 
Together with Grant's success at Vicksburg, it brought 
new hope to the defenders of the Union, although it 
was still evident that a long hard struggle remained. 

The state of Pennsylvania soon after the battle gave 
to the Federal government seventeen and a half acres 
of land to be used as a national cemetery in which to 
bury the fifty thousand men who fell on the field. 
On November 19, 1863, the cemetery was formally 
dedicated. Edward Everett was the orator of the 
day; but President Lincoln was asked to make a few 
remarks in which he was formally to set apart the 
grounds to their use. 

On the train that took President Lincoln to Gettys- 
burg he wrote out with pencil the words that he 
planned to speak. At Gettysburg a grand procession 
accompanied by military music marched to the summit 
of the little hill overlooking the battlefield, where amid 
the trees a stand for the speakers had been erected. 
Edward Everett delivered an elaborate polished ora- 
tion two hours long in which he reviewed the objects 
of the war and the battle and its consequences. The 
President then spoke the few simple words that the 

134 



SPEECH AT GETTYSBI RG 133 

world has since appraised as one of the greatest 
speeches ever delivered. 



SPEECH AT THE DEDICATION OF THE 

NATIONAL CEMETERY AT 

GETTYSBURG 

Abraham Lincoln 

Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth 
on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty, and 
dedicated to the proposition that all men are created 
equal. 

Now w r e are engaged in a great civil war, testing 
whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so 
dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great 
battlefield 1 of that war. We have come to dedicate a 
portion of that field as a final resting-place for those who 
here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is 
altogether fitting and proper that we should do this. 

But in a larger sense we cannot dedicate, we cannot 
consecrate, w r e cannot hallow this ground. The brave 
men, living and dead, who struggled here, have conse- 
crated it far above our power to add or detract. The 
world will little note, nor long remember, what we say 
here; but it can never forget what they did here. It is 
for us, the living, rather to be dedicated here to the un- 
finished w T ork which they who fought here have thus far 
so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated 
to the great task remaining before us, that from these 
honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause 
for which they gave the last full measure of devotion; 
that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have 
died in vain ; that this nation, under God, shall have a 



1 36 ABRAHAM LINCOLN 

new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, 
by the people, for the people shall not perish from the 
earth. 

Show that this speech was peculiarly appropriate to the occa- 
sion of its delivery. 

In what respect is the central thought of this speech like the 
central thought of Webster's First Bunker Hill Oration? 

In what respect is the conception of democratic government as 
expressed in this speech like that expressed by Webster in his 
Reply to Hayne? 

Is there anything in this speech that indicates that Lincoln 
was conscious that the nation was fighting to preserve demo- 
cratic institutions and not merely the American Union? 

What did Lincoln mean by "a new birth of freedom"? 

Can you tell why this speech is considered one of the greatest 
ever delivered? 



LINCOLN'S SECOND INAUGURAL ADDRESS 

March 4, 1865 

When Lincoln approached the beginning of his sec- 
ond term the long struggle was nearly concluded. If, 
however, the end had not been in sight, the Union 
government could hardy have continued the contest. 
Blood and treasure had been poured out until the 
North was almost exhausted. Although the rebellious 
forces of the South were nearly subdued, the future 
of the Union was dark. 

The President's policies had, at last, gained the al- 
most unanimous support of the North. One by one 
his enemies and traducers had been silenced; but 
Lincoln had no thought of exultation over his triumph. 
On the occasion of his second inauguration, with a 
devout and chastened spirit, he recognized the sincerity 
of the South, the righteousness of the cause of the 
North, and the authority of the Almighty to sit in 
judgment over both. His solemn words are often 
likened to the more lofty portions of the Old Testa- 
ment. No greater speech was ever spoken. So con- 
trite was his spirit, that many readers seem to find 
his words inspired with a prophetic realization of his 
impending doom. 



137 



138 ABRAHAM LINCOLN 

SECOND INAUGURAL ADDRESS 

Abraham Lincoln 

Fellow-countrymen: At this second appearing to take 
the oath of the presidential office there is less occasion for 
an extended address than there was at the first. Then 
a statement somewhat in detail of a course to be pursued 
seemed fitting and proper. Now at the expiration of four 
years, during which public declarations have been con- 
stantly called forth on every point and phase of the great 
contest which still absorbs the attention and engrosses 
the energies of the nation, little that is new could be 
presented. 

The progress of our arms, upon which all else chiefly 
depends, is as well known to the public as to myself, 
and is, I trust, reasonably satisfactory and encouraging 
to all. With high hopes for the future, no prediction in 
regard to it is ventured. 

On the occasion corresponding to this four years ago 
all thoughts were anxiously directed to an impending 
civil war. All dreaded it; all sought to avert it. While 
the inaugural address was being delivered from this place, 
devoted altogether to saving the Union without war, insur- 
gent agents were in the city seeking to destroy it without 
war — seeking to dissolve the Union and divide the effects 
by negotiation. Both parties deprecated war; but one of 
them would make war rather than let the nation survive, 
and the other would accept war rather than let it perish. 
And the war came. One-eighth of the whole population 
were colored slaves, not distributed generally over the 
Union, but localized in the southern part of it. These 
slaves constituted a peculiar and powerful interest. All 
knew that this interest was somehow the cause of the war. 



SECOND [NAUGURAL ADDRESS 139 

To Strengthen, perpetuate, and extend this interest was the 
object for which the insurgents would rend the Union, 
even by war, while the government claimed no right to 
do more than to restrict the territorial enlargement of it. 
Neither party expected for the war the magnitude or 
the duration which it has already attained. Neither an- 
ticipated that the cause of the conflict might cease with, or 
even before, the conflict itself should cease. Each looked 
for an easier triumph and a result less fundamental and 
astounding. 

Both read the same Bible and pray to the same God; 
and each invokes His aid against the other. 

It may seem strange that any man should dare to ask 
a just God's assistance in wringing his bread from the 
sweat of other men's faces; but let us judge not, that we 
be not judged. 

The prayers of both could not be answered. That of 
neither has been answered fully. The Almighty has His 
own purposes. 

11 Woe unto the world because of offences, for it must 
needs be that offences come; but woe to that man by 
whom the offence cometh." 

If we shall suppose that American slavery is one of 
those offences, which in the providence of God must needs 
come, but which, having continued through His appointed 
time. He now wills to remove, and that He gives to 
both North and South this terrible war as the woe due 
to those by whom the offence came, shall we discern 
therein any departure from those Divine attributes which 
the believers in a living God always ascribe to Him? 

Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this 
mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet if 
God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by 
the bondman's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited 
toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn 



i 4 o ABRAHAM LINCOLN 

with the lash shall be paid with another drawn with the 
sword, as was said three thousand years ago so still it 
must be said, " The judgments of the Lord are true and 
righteous altogether." 

With malice toward none, with charity for all, with 
firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, 
let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind 
up the nation's wounds; to care for him who shall have 
borne the battle, and for his widow and orphans; to do 
all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting 
peace among ourselves and with all nations. 

Compare the length and scope of this speech with that of 
other presidential inaugural addresses. 

Did Lincoln do well to use biblical diction in this state paper? 

What was the emotional effect of Lincoln's showing in this 
speech that his work was merged with his religion? 

Did the President in your opinion correctly state the cause of 
the war? 

Did President Lincoln's address lose effectiveness in any 
degree because he failed to predict success for the Union armies? 

What sentiments expressed by Lincoln in this speech finally 
convinced the Confederacy that the North had determined to 
prosecute the war vigorously to the end? 

What attitude toward his enemies is shown by Lincoln in 
this speech? 

How is the character of Lincoln reflected in his confidences, 
hopes, and aims? 

To what sentiments and motives does Lincoln appeal? 

Did Lincoln in this speech establish a precedent in the his- 
tory of democratic government for toleration of opponents' 
views and respect for differing opinion, or can you point to 
similar sentiments expressed previously by some other orator? 



THE NEW SOUTH 

December 21, 1886 

The close of the war left the' South impoverished and 
almost hopeless. Roads, bridges, and buildings were 
destroyed ; and the land was desolated. The dis- 
banded Confederate soldiers had to begin life over 
again without resources and often without health. 
Four million freedmen who owned no property were 
scattered throughout the country where few were able 
to employ them. 

Improvement came very slowly. The former slaves 
lacked the training that would make them industrious. 
They were inclined to live in idleness. In bitter oppo- 
sition to the will of the North, the Southern legis- 
latures passed laws that tended to keep the negroes in 
a state of subjection and prevented the exercise of their 
newly gained rights. In retaliation Congress declined 
to receive the representatives and senators elected 
by the states that had seceded. Northern carpet- 
baggers and unprincipled adventurers attempted to 
gain political control in the South or deliver authority 
into the hands of the negroes. So slowly was progress 
made toward reconstruction and reconciliation that it 
was not until 1872 that Congress granted a fairly com- 
plete general amnesty to those who had fought for 
the Confederacy. Indeed not until many years later 
were the last remaining disabilities removed. 

Chief among those who during this critical period 
were instrumental in producing a better understand- 

141 



i 4 2 HENRY W. GRADY 

ing between the North and the South was Henry W. 
Grady. At a dinner of the New England Society in 
New York on December 21, 1886, at a time when the 
country was ripe for the word, he delivered a speech 
which among the younger generation stimulated every- 
where a resolve to end forever the prejudices and 
animosities that had survived the Civil \Yar. This 
speech marks the climax of the reconciliation. The 
last echo of the strife was stilled in 1898 when the 
sons of the soldiers of the Blue and of the Gray fought 
together in the Spanish-American War. 



THE NEW SOUTH 

Henry W. Grady 

" There was a South of slavery and secession — that 
South is dead. There is a South of union and freedom — 
that South, thank God, is living, breathing, growing even- 
hour." These words, delivered from the immortal lips 
of Benjamin H. Hill, 1 at Tammany Hall, 2 in 1866, true 
then, and truer now, I shall make my text to-night. 

In speaking to the toast with which you have honored 
me, I accept the term, " The New South/'' as in no sense 
disparaging to the old. Dear to me, sir, is the home of 
my childhood, and the traditions of my people. I would 
not, if I could, dim the glory they won in peace and war, 
or by word or deed take aught from the splendor and 
grace of their civilization, never equalled, and perhaps 
never to be equalled in its chivalric strength and grace. 
There is a new South, not through protest against the 
old, but because of new conditions, new adjustments, and, 
if you please, new ideas and aspirations. 

Doctor Talmage 3 has drawn for you, with a master's 



THE NEW SOUTH 143 

hand, the picture of your returning armies. He has told 
you how, in the pomp and circumstance of war, they came 
back to you, marching with proud and victorious tread, 
reading their glory in a nation's eyes! Will you bear 
with me while I tell you of another army that sought its 
home at the close of the late w r ar — an army that marched 
home in defeat and not in victory — in pathos and not in 
splendor, but in glory that equalled yours, and to hearts 
as loving as ever welcomed heroes home? Let me picture 
to you the foot-sore Confederate soldier, as, buttoning 
up in his faded gray jacket the parole which was to bear 
testimony to his children of his fidelity and faith, he 
turned his face southward from Appomattox in April, 
1865. 

Think of him as ragged, half-starved, heavy-hearted, 
enfeebled by want and wounds having fought to ex- 
haustion, he surrenders his gun, wrings the hands of his 
comrades in silence, and lifting his tear-stained and pallid 
face for the last time to the graves that dot old Virginia 
hills, pulls his gray cap over his brow and begins the slow 
and faithful journey. What does he find — let me ask you 
who went to your homes eager to find, in the welcome you 
had justly earned, full payment for four years' sacrifice — 
what does he find when, having followed the battle 
stained cross against overwhelming odds, dreading death 
not half so much as surrender, he reaches the home he 
left so prosperous and beautiful? 

He finds his home in ruins, his farm devastated, his 
slaves free, his stock killed, his barns empty, his trade de- 
stroyed, his money worthless, his social system, feudal in 
its magnificence, swept away ; his people without law or 
legal status, his comrades slain, and the burdens of others 
heavy on his shoulders. Crushed by defeat, his very tradi- 
tions are gone. Without money, credit, employment, 
material, or training, and, besides all this, confronted with 



H4 HENRY W. GRADY 

the gravest problem that ever met human intelligence — 
the establishing of a status for the vast body of his liber- 
ated slaves. 

What does he do — this hero in gray, with a heart of 
gold? Does he sit down in sullenness and despair? Not 
for a day. Surely, God, who had stripped him of his 
prosperity, inspired to him in his adversity. As ruin was 
never before so overwhelming, never was restoration 
swifter. The soldiers stepped from the trenches into the 
furrow; horses that had charged Federal guns marched 
before the plow; and the fields that ran red with human 
blood in April were green with the harvest in June. From 
the ashes left us in 1864 4 we have raised a brave and 
beautiful city. Somehow or other we have caught the 
sunshine in the bricks and mortar of our homes, and have 
builded therein not one ignoble prejudice or memory. 

The old South rested everything on slavery and agri- 
culture, unconscious that these could neither give nor 
maintain healthy growth. The new South presents a per- 
fect democracy, the oligarchs in the popular movement — 
a social system compact and closely knitted, less splendid 
on the surface, but stronger at the core; a hundred farms 
for every plantation, fifty homes for every palace, and a 
diversified industry that meets the complex needs of this 
complex age. 

The new South is enamored of her new work. Her 
soul is stirred with the breath of a new life. The light 
of a grander day is falling fair on her face. She is thrill- 
ing with the consciousness of a growing power and pros- 
perity. As she stands upright, full-statured and equal 
among the people of the earth, breathing the keen air and 
looking out upon the expanding horizon, she understands 
that her emancipation came because in the inscrutable wis- 
dom of God her honest purpose was crossed, and her 
brave armies were beaten. 



THE NEW SOUTH 145 

This is said in no spirit of time-serving or apology. 
The South has nothing for which to apologize. She be- 
lieves that the late struggle between the States was war 
and not rebellion, revolution and not conspiracy, and that 
her convictions were as honest as yours. I should be 
unjust to the dauntless spirit of the South and to my own 
convictions if I did not make this plain in this presence. 
The South has nothing to take back. 5 In my native town 
of Athens is a monument that crowns its central hills — a 
plain, white shaft. Deep cut into its shining side is a 
name dear to me 6 above the names of men, that of a brave 
and simple man who died in a brave and simple faith. 
Not for all the glories of New England — from Plymouth 
Rock all the way — would I exchange the heritage he left 
me in his soldiers death. To the feet of that shaft I 
shall send my children's children to reverence him who 
ennobled their name with his heroic blood. But, sir, 
speaking from the shadow of that memory, which I honor 
as I do nothing else on earth, I say that the cause in which 
he suffered and for which he gave his life was adjudged 
by higher and fuller wisdom than his or mine, and I am 
glad that the omniscient God held the balance of battle 
in His Almighty Hand, and that human slavery was 
swept forever from American soil — the American Union 
saved from the wreck of war. 

This message, Mr. President, comes to you from. con- 
secrated ground. Every foot of the soil about the city 
in which I live is sacred as a battle-ground of the Re- 
public. Every hill that invests it is hallowed to you by 
the blood of your brothers who died for your victory, and 
double hallowed to us by the blood of those who died 
hopeless, but undaunted, in defeat — sacred soil to all of 
us, rich with memories that make us purer and stronger 
and better, silent but stanch witnesses in its red desolation 
of the matchless valor of American hearts and the death- 



146 HENRY W. GRADY 

less glory of American arms — speaking an eloquent wit- 
ness, in its white peace and prosperity, to the indissoluble 
union of American people. 

Now, what answer has New England to this message? 
Will she permit the prejudice of war to remain in the 
hearts of the conquered? Will she transmit this preju- 
dice to the next generation, that in their hearts which 
never felt the generous ardor of conflict it may perpetuate 
itself? Will she withhold, save in strained courtesy, the 
hand which, straight from his soldier's heart, Grant of- 
fered to Lee at Appomattox? Will she make the vision 
of a restored and happy people, w T hich gathered above the 
couch of your dying captain, filling his heart with grace, 
touching his lips with praise, and glorifying his path to 
the grave — will she make this vision on which the last 
sigh of his expiring soul breathed a benediction, a cheat 
and delusion? If she does, the South, never abject in 
asking for comradeship must accept with dignity its re- 
fusal; but if she does not refuse to accept in frankness and 
sincerity this message of good-will and friendship, then 
will the prophecy of Webster, delivered in this very so- 
ciety forty years ago amid tremendous applause, become 
true, be verified in its fullest sense, when he said : " Stand- 
ing hand to hand and clasping hands, we should remain 
united as we have been for sixty years, citizens of the 
same country, members of the same government, united, 
all united now and forever. ,, 

Can you tell why the Civil War was more destructive to the 
South than to the North? 

Was Grady wise in praising the Old South at the beginning 
of his speech? 

When the South entered upon the Civil War was it actuated 
by selfish ambition, or did it believe in the justice and right- 
eousness of its cause? 

In what respects did the New South differ from the Old? 

When the war was over was it the best policy for the North 



THE NEW SOUTH 147 

to attempt to placate and conciliate the South or to hold it in 
subjection ? 

Do you think that Grady's reference to Dr. Talmage's speech 
is an instance of skillful transition and connection, or do you 
think that after Grady took his place at the table he originated 
the eloquent description of the Confederate soldier's return? 

Would Grady have done better not to refer to his father's 
record in the war? 

Enumerate the instances in this speech where Grady shows 
that there is a common sentiment in which the North and the 
South can unite. 

Grady speaks of what new democracy? 

In what sense does this speech mark a period in American 
history? 



THE STRENUOUS LIFE 

April 10, 1899 

The Civil War determined the relation of the Federal 
government to the states, but it took another war to 
settle its relation to the other nations of the world. 
Washington had advised against entangling alliances 
with foreign powers and President Monroe, in his 
famous message of 1823, in an attempt to promote the 
peace and safety of the United States and to render 
more remote the possibility of clashes with European 
nations, declared that henceforth the American conti- 
nents were not to be colonized by foreign powers. In 
a word, the United States in the Monroe Doctrine an- 
nounced that it denied to European powers any action 
that endangered the sovereignty of any American 
nation. 

In the course of time, however, irresponsible South 
American governments discovered that after failing to 
discharge their obligations to foreign nations they 
might escape punishment by hiding behind the Monroe 
Doctrine. Gradually, therefore, for the sake of jus- 
tice, the United States found it necessary to exercise 
a certain degree of control over the countries it pro- 
tected. Instead of assuring the United States peace- 
ful isolation, the Monroe Doctrine seemed to promise 
to keep the country perpetually involved in South 
American affairs and to bring it from time to time 
into grave danger of war with Europe. 

The crisis came in connection with the Cuban war 
for independence in the last years of the century. Con- 

148 



THE STRENUOUS LIFE 149 

ditions in Cuba had become intolerable. Business had 
been ruined ; thousands of men, women, and children 
had been shot or starved ; and there was no prospect 
that Spain could maintain her sovereignty. Warnings 
given by President Cleveland and President Mc- 
kinley had been unheeded. On April 19, 1898, Con- 
gress finally passed a resolution declaring Cuba free. 
War with Spain followed soon after. 

The first notable battle was fought May 1, 1898, by 
Commodore Dewey in Manila Bay where he totally 
destroyed the enemy's fleet. The most important land 
battle was fought near Santiago, Cuba, where Colonel 
Roosevelt led a brilliant and successful assault on San 
Juan Hill. Before the peace protocol was signed on 
August 13, the United States had won the Philippines, 
Cuba, and other islands. 

To win the Philippines proved to be easier than to 
know what to do with them. Cuba, under the protec- 
tion of the United States, seemed able to rule itself 
and was given its independence; but the Philippine 
islands were inhabited largely by half-civilized races 
utterly unfit to govern themseves. Were they to be 
handed back to the misrule of Spain, or to be aban- 
doned to anarchy or the exploitation of some grasping 
power? Great difference of opinion existed among 
American statesmen and many were the plans pro- 
posed, but gradually it became clear that the time had 
come when the United States should cast aside that 
outworn view of the Monroe Doctrine, that sought 
for America isolation and separation from the rest of 
the world, and should adopt a new, expanded, and 
generous interpretation, that would place the country 
among world powers and would recognize an obliga- 
tion and duty to promote liberty and democracy 
wherever possible throughout the globe. 



150 THEODORE ROOSEVELT 

More than any other man, Theodore Roosevelt was 
influential in upholding this ideal. He maintained that 
it was a relic of primitive civilization for a nation to 
avoid physical, mental, and moral exchange with its 
neighbors, that only by shirking its duty could it neg- 
lect to take part in solving world problems, and only 
through blind stupidity could it fail to provide itself 
with the army and navy necessary to protect its lib- 
erty and the liberty of others. He set forth these 
views in many addresses. The most notable, however, 
was given at the Hamilton Club, in Chicago, on April 
10, 1899. It is called The Strenuous Life. Its vision 
is so far in advance of the views of most American 
statesmen of his time that it seems like a prophecy of 
the liberal American spirit that in the world crisis of 
191 7 was to rise supreme over ignoble timidity and all 
selfish considerations. 



THE STRENUOUS LIFE 

Theodore Roosevelt 

In speaking to you, men of the greatest city of the West, 
men of the state which gave to the country Lincoln and 
Grant, men who pre-eminently and distinctly embody all 
that is most American in the American character, I wish 
to preach not the doctrine of ignoble ease but the doctrine 
of the strenuous life; the life of toil and effort; of labor 
and strife; to preach that highest form of success which 
comes not to the man who desires mere easy peace, but to 
the man who does not shrink from danger, from hardship, 
or from bitter toil, and who out of these wins the splendid 
ultimate triumph. 

A life of ignoble ease, a life of that peace which springs 



THE STRENUOUS LIFE 151 

merely from lack of desire or of power to strive after 
great things, is as little worthy of a nation as of an indi- 
vidual. I ask only that what every self-respecting Ameri- 
can demands from himself, and from his sons, shall be 
demanded of the American nation as a whole. Who 
among you would teach your boys that ease, that peace, is 
to be the first consideration in their eyes, to be the ulti- 
mate goal after which they strive? You men of Chicago 
have made this city great, you men of Illinois have done 
your share, and more than your share in making America 
great, because you neither preach nor practice such a doc- 
trine. You work yourselves and you bring up your sons 
to work. 

We do not admire the man of timid peace. We admire 
the man who embodies victorious effort; the man who 
never wrongs his neighbor; who is prompt to help a 
friend ; but who has the virile qualities necessary to win 
in the stern strife of actual life. It is hard to fail; but 
it is worse never to have tried to succeed. In this life 
we get nothing save by effort. 

As it is with the individual so it is with the nation. 
It is a base untruth to say that happy is the nation that 
has no history. Thrice happy is the nation that has a 
glorious history. Far better it is to dare mighty things, 
to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by 
failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who 
neither enjoy much nor suffer much because they live in 
the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat. 
If in 1 86 1 the men w T ho loved the Union had believed 
that peace was the end of all things and war and strife 
the worst of all things, and had acted up to their belief, 
we would have saved hundreds of thousands of lives, we 
would have saved hundreds of millions of dollars. More- 
over, besides, saving all the blood and treasure we then 
lavished, we would have prevented the heart-break of 



152 THEODORE ROOSEVELT 

many women, the dissolution of many homes; and we 
would have spared the country those months of gloom and 
shame when it seemed as if our armies marched only to 
defeat. We could have avoided all this suffering, simply 
by shrinking from strife. And if we had thus avoided it, 
we would have shown that we were weaklings and that 
we were unfit to stand among the great nations of the 
earth. Thank God for the iron in the blood of our 
fathers, the men who upheld the wisdom of Lincoln and 
bore sword or rifle in the armies of Grant! Let us, the 
children of the men who proved themselves equal to the 
mighty days — let us, the children of the men who carried 
the great Civil War to a triumphant conclusion, praise the 
God of our fathers that the ignoble counsels of peace were 
rejected, that the suffering and loss, the blackness of sor- 
row and despair, were unflinchingly faced, and the years 
of strife endured; for in the end the slave was freed, 
the Union restored, and the mighty American re- 
public placed once more as a helmeted queen among the 
nations. 

If we are to be a really great people, we must strive in 
good faith to play a great part in the world. We cannot 
avoid meeting great issues. All that we can determine 
for ourselves is whether we shall meet them well or ill. 
In 1898 we could not help being brought face to face 
with the problem of war with Spain. All we could 
decide was whether we should shrink like cowards from 
the contest, or enter it as beseemed a brave and high- 
spirited people; and, once in, whether failure or success 
should crown our banners. So it is now. We cannot 
avoid the responsibilities that confront us in Hawaii, 
Cuba, Porto Rico, and the Philippines. All we can 
decide is whether we shall meet them in a way that will 
redound to the national credit, or whether we shall make 
of our dealings with these new problems a dark and 



THE STRENUOUS LIKE 153 

shameful page in our history. To refuse to deal with 
them at all merely amounts to dealing with them hadly. 
We have a given problem to solve. If we undertake the 
solution, there is, of course, always danger that we may 
not solve it aright; but to refuse to undertake the solu- 
tion simply renders it certain that we cannot possibly solve 
it aright. The timid man, the lazy man, the man who 
distrusts his country, the over-civilized man, who has lost 
the great fighting, masterful virtues, the ignorant man, 
and the man of dull mind, whose soul is incapable of 
feeling the mighty life that thrills " stern men with 
empires in their brains " — all these, of course, shrink from 
seeing the nation undertake its new duties; shrink from 
seeing us build a navy and an army adequate to our 
needs; shrink from seeing us do our share of the world's 
work, by bringing order out of chaos in the great, fair 
tropic islands from which the valor of our soldiers and 
sailors has driven the Spanish flag. These are the men 
who fear the strenuous life, who fear the only national 
life which is really worth leading. They believe in that 
cloistered life which saps the hardy virtues in a nation, 
as it saps them in the individual ; or else they are wedded 
to that base spirit of gain and greed which recognizes in 
commercialism the be-all and end-all of national life, 
instead of realizing that, though an indispensable element, 
it is, after all, but one of the many elements that go to 
make up true national greatness. No country can long 
endure if its foundations are not laid deep in the mate- 
rial prosperity which comes from thrift, from business 
energy and enterprise, from hard, unsparing effort in 
the fields of industrial activity; but neither w T as any na- 
tion ever yet truly great if it relied upon material pros- 
perity alone. All honor must be paid to the architects of 
our material prosperity, to the great captains of industry 
who have built our factories and our railroads, to the 



154 THEODORE ROOSEVELT 

strong men who toil for wealth with brain or hand ; for 
great is the debt of the nation to these and their kind. 
But our debt is yet greater to the men whose highest type 
is to be found in a statesman like Lincoln, a soldier like 
Grant. They showed by their lives that they recognized 
the law of work, the law of strife; they toiled to win a 
competence for themselves and those dependent upon 
them; but they recognized that there were yet other and 
even loftier duties — duties to the nation and duties to 
the race. 

We cannot sit huddled within our own borders and 
avow ourselves merely an assemblage of well-to-do huck- 
sters who care nothing for what happens beyond. Such 
a policy would defeat even its own end ; for as the nations 
grow to have ever wider and wider interests, and are 
brought into closer and closer contact, if we are to hold 
our own in the struggle for naval and commercial su- 
premacy, we must build up our power without our own 
borders. We must build the isthmian canal, and we must 
grasp the points of vantage which will enable us to have 
our say in deciding the destiny of the oceans of the East 
and the West. 

So much for the commercial side. From the standpoint 
of international honor the argument is even stronger. 
The guns that thundered off Manila and Santiago left 
us echoes of glory, but they also left us a legacy of duty. 
If we drove out a mediaeval tyranny only to make room 
for savage anarchy, we had better not have begun the . 
task at all. It is worse than idle to say that we have no 
duty to perform and can leave to their fates the islands 
we have conquered. Such a course would be the course 
of infamy. It would be followed at once by utter chaos 
in the wretched islands themselves. Some stronger, man- 
lier power would have to step in and do the work; and 
we would have shown ourselves weaklings, unable to 



THE STRENUOUS LIFE 155 

earn' to successful completion the labors that great and 
high-spirited nations are eager to undertake. 

The work must be done. We cannot escape our re- 
sponsibility, and if we are worth our salt, we shall be glad 
of the chance to do the work — glad of the chance to show 
ourselves equal to one of the great tasks set modern civi- 
lization. But let us not deceive ourselves as to the im- 
portance of the task. Let us not be misled by vain glory 
into underestimating the strain it will put on our powers. 
Above all, let us, as we value our own self-respect, face 
the responsibilities with proper seriousness, courage, and 
high resolve. We must demand the highest order of in- 
tegrity and ability in our public men who are to grapple 
with these new problems. We must hold to a rigid ac- 
countability those public servants who show unfaithfulness 
to the interests of the nation or inability to rise to the 
high level of the new demands upon our strength and our 
resources. 

Our army needs complete reorganization 1 — not merely 
enlarging — and the reorganization can only come as the 
result of legislation. A proper general staff should be 
established, and the positions of ordnance, commissary, 
and quartermaster officers should be filled by detail from 
the line. Above all, the army must be given a chance to 
exercise in large bodies. Never again should we see, as 
we saw in the Spanish War, major-generals in command 
of divisions w T ho had never commanded three companies 
together in the field. Yet, incredible to relate, the recent 
Congress has shown a queer inability to learn some of the 
lessons of the war. There were large bodies of men in 
both branches who opposed the declaration of war, who 
opposed the ratification of peace, who opposed the up- 
building of the army, and who even opposed the purchase 
of armor at a reasonable price for the battleships and 
cruisers, thereby putting an absolute stop to the building 



156 THEODORE ROOSEVELT 

of any new fighting ships for the navy. If during the 
years to come any disaster should befall our arms, afloat 
or ashore, and thereby any shame come to the United 
States, remember that the blame will lie upon the men 
whose names appear upon the roll-calls of Congress on 
the wrong side of these great questions. On them will 
lie the burden of any loss of our soldiers and sailors, of 
any dishonor to the flag; and upon you and the people 
of the country will lie the blame, if you do not repudiate, 
in no unmistakable way, what these men have done. The 
blame will not rest upon the untrained commander of 
untried troops; upon the civil officers of a department, 
the organization of which has been left utterly inadequate ; 
or upon the admiral with insufficient number of ships; 
but upon the public men who have so lamentably failed 
in the forethought as to refuse to remedy these evils long 
in advance, and upon the nation that stands behind those 
public men. 

The army and navy are the sword and the shield which 
this nation must carry if she is to do her duty among the 
nations of the earth — if she is not to stand merely as the 
China of the Western Hemisphere. Our proper conduct 
toward the tropic islands we have wrested from Spain 
is merely the form which our duty has taken at the mo- 
ment. Of course, we are bound to handle the affairs of 
our own household well. We must see that there is civic 
honesty, civic cleanliness, civic good sense in our home 
administration of city, state, and nation. We must strive 
for honesty in office, for honesty towards the creditors 
of the nation and of the individual; for the widest free- 
dom of individual initiative where possible and for the 
wisest control of individual initiative where it is hostile 
to the welfare of the many. But because we set our own 
household in order, we are not thereby excused from play- 
ing our part in the great affairs of the world. A man's 



THE STRENUOUS LIFE 157 

first duty is to his own home, but he is not thereby excused 
from doing his duty to the state; for if he fails in this 
second duty it is under the penalty of ceasing to be a free- 
man. In the same way, while a nation's first duty is 
within its own borders, it is not thereby absolved from 
facing its duties in the world as a whole ; and if it refuses 
to do so, it merely forfeits its rights to struggle for a place 
among the peoples that shape the destiny of mankind. 

I have scant patience with those who fear to undertake 
the task of governing the Philippines, and who openly 
avow that they do fear to undertake it, or that they shrink 
from it because of the expense and trouble; but I have 
even scanter patience with those who make a pretense of 
humanitarianism to hide and cover their timidity, and 
who cant about " liberty " and " the consent of the gov- 
erned," in order to excuse themselves for the unwilling- 
ness to play the part of men. Their doctrines, if carried 
out, would make it incumbent upon us to leave the 
Apaches of Arizona to work out their own salvation and 
to decline to interfere in a single Indian reservation. 
Their doctrines condemn your forefathers and mine for 
ever having settled in these United States. 

When once we have put down armed resistance, when 
once our rule is acknowledged, then an even more diffi- 
cult task will begin, for then we must see to it that the 
islands are administered with absolute honesty and with 
good judgment: If we let the public service of the 
islands be turned into the prey of the spoils politician we 
shall have begun to tread the path which Spain trod to 
her own destruction. We must send out there only good 
and able men, chosen for their fitness, and not because of 
their partisan service ; and these men must not only ad- 
minister impartial justice to the natives and serve their 
own government with honesty and fidelity, but they must 
also show the utmost tact and firmness, remembering that 



158 THEODORE ROOSEVELT 

with such people as those with whom we are to deal weak- 
ness is the greatest of crimes, and that next to weakness 
comes lack of consideration for their principles and preju- 
dices. 

I preach to you, then, my countrymen, that our country 
calls not for the life of ease, but for the life of strenuous 
endeavor. The twentieth century looms before us big 
with the fate of many nations. If we stand idly by, if 
we seek merely swollen, slothful ease, and ignoble peace, 2 
if w T e shrink from the hard contests where men must win 
at hazard of their lives and at the risk of all they hold 
dear, then the bolder and the stronger peoples will pass us 
by and will win for themselves the domination of the 
world. 3 Let us therefore boldly face the life of strife, 
resolute to do our duty well and manfully; resolute to 
uphold righteousness by deed and by word ; resolute to be 
both honest and grave to serve high ideals, yet to use 
practical methods. Above all, let us shrink from no strife, 
moral or physical, w T ithin or without the nation, provided 
that we are certain that the strife is justified ; for it is only 
through strife, through hard and dangerous endeavor, 
that we shall ultimately win the goal of true national 
greatness. 

Is " happy is the nation that has no history " true from the 
point of view of modern historical method? 

Compare the great issues of which Roosevelt spoke in 1899 
with those that confronted Wilson in 191 6. ■ 

What do you think of Roosevelt's practical politics as reflected 
in his reference to the roll-calls of Congress? 

In what respects is peace for man or nation not an end in 
itself? 

Nietzsche said " live dangerously." Looking at the matter 
from a broad point of view, which do you think is the better 
habit, peace or strife ? 

In what respects did Roosevelt by means of this speech 
attempt to alter the military policy of the United States? 

Did Roosevelt recommend this change in military policy 



THE STRENUOUS LIFE 159 

through nervousness, a belligerent disposition, an intimate 
knowledge of public affairs, or vision? 

Doei this speech in your opinion preserve a proper balance 
between physical power and moral duty? 

How did the Spanish War affect the foreign policy of the 
United States? 

Was the new policy more democratic or less democratic than 
the old? 

In what senses did the United States at the end of Spanish 
War become a world power? 

Was Washington's advice against entangling alliances bad, 
was it outworn, or had it been misinterpreted ? 

Is Roosevelt trulv democratic when he denies the right of 
self-government to Apaches and savage Philippinos? 

Does Roosevelt in this speech recognize, in the words of 
Lincoln, "a new birth of freedom"? 

Is Roosevelt in this speech urging America to work for selfish 
ends, or is he advocating national altruism? 



THE CALL TO ARMS 

September 5, 1914 

The twenty-eighth of June, 1914, will probably be 
taken by historians as the beginning of the Great 
War. As a matter of fact the war was the inevitable 
outgrowth of a very insidious development that can be 
traced as far back as the downfall of Napoleon and 
the resulting diplomatic agreements of the Congress of 
Vienna. 

As a consequence of secret conventions made at this 
conference, liberty and democracy found thereafter 
their haven in the freedom-loving lands of England 
and France, while autocracy and absolutism were nour- 
ished in Germany, Austria, and Russia. France de- 
veloped a republican form of government, and her 
people like the people of England decided fof them- 
selves how they were to be ruled. In Germany, on the 
other hand, a Prussian military clique, under the 
leadership of the Kaiser, seized the reins of state and 
drove the people into a highly organized system of 
autocratic control. 

The constitution of Germany, in contrast with that 
of the United States, was made by hereditary rulers 
and never was approved by vote of the people. Not 
even the Kaiser was accountable directly to his sub- 
jects, for he maintained that he ruled by Divine Right. 
The chief legislative body of the Empire was the 
Bundesrath, the members of which were appointed by 
the rulers of the various German states. As the 
Kaiser had twenty votes in this council of sixty-one 

160 



THE CALL TO ARMS 161 

members, he was able both to control legislation and, 
with the use of but fourteen of his votes, to block 
changes in the constitution. The Reichstag, the popu- 
lar assembly, was given very little political power and 
was utterly unable to secure for Germany democratic 
government. Constitutional or other radical reform 
could come only through revolution. 

When in 1871 at the time of the Franco-Prussian 
war, the German army in eight months overran France 
and secured an indemnity of $1,000,000,000, and the 
two invaluable provinces of Alsace and Lorraine, the 
German rulers became war-mad and lost their desire 
to win greatness slowly through the arts of peace. 
They planned to found a great empire by means of the 
sword. Year after year they drilled, increased, and 
perfected their army until' it became the most formi- 
dable in Europe. In 1900 they began to construct a 
powerful navy. So the power of the military authori- 
ties grew until it might be said that Germany was not 
a country that possessed an army ; it was an army that 
possessed a country. 

In a shameless way, moreover, the German people 
furthered the plan of their rulers for conquest and 
dominion. They submitted blindly to arbitrary au- 
thority. They planned to build in time a railway 
which was to extend from Berlin to Bagdad and 
was to be the artery of a greater German Empire that 
would in time add to Austria, Bulgaria, and Turkey, 
and Persia, and India. 

In 1914 the Kiel naval canal connecting the North 
Sea and the Baltic was completed. The Great Army 
bill of 1 91 3 had brought the army to an unprecedented 
size, and it had been drilled until it was fit. All was 
ready. But little Servia was in the way. The Bagdad 
railway passed through her territories and she placed 



1 62 THE CALL TO ARMS 

a hostile barrier between Germany and her allies on the 
east. 

On June 28, 1914, a son of the Emperor of Aus- 
tria was murdered by a Serb in Sarajevo. Austria 
seemed to be convinced that Servia had planned the 
assassination because of her objection to Austria's con- 
trol of Bosnia and other Serb provinces. On July 23, 
1914, Austria sent Servia an insulting ultimatum. 
Servia, however, granted all that was asked excepting 
permission for Austrian officials to sit in Servian 
courts. Austria, nevertheless, refused to accept this 
answer and on July 28, 1914, declared war on Servia. 
On August 1, Germany, which had already begun gath- 
ering her troops, declared war on Russia, giving as her 
reason the statement that the latter nation was begin- 
ning to mobilize. 

War with France was the inevitable outcome. Ger- 
man military leaders knew that the theater of 
war would be west of the Rhine and pre- 
pared to carry out their plans for attacking France 
through Belgium, the neutrality of which had 
been guaranteed by the treaties of 1839 and 
1870, in which France, Prussia, and Great Britain 
were parties. When Germany in spite of all 
pledges crossed the border and violated the neutrality 
of Belgium, Great Britain declared war on Germany, 
and on August 1 with her army of 150,000 began to 
help preserve the sovereignty of the little country. The 
heroic and unexpected resistance on the part of the 
Belgians delayed the Germans in their march to Paris, 
and it was August 24 before the frontiers of France 
were sighted. In September came the great battle of 
the Marne in which the French under Marshal Joffre 
disastrously drove back the Germans and saved the 
world for democracy. Defeated in their initial sur- 



THE CALL TO ARMS 163 

prise attack. Germany resorted to trench warfare and 
defensive tactics. 

Germany's invasion of Belgium aroused every man 
and woman in England. On August 28, 1914, Premier 
llith addressed a note to the Lord Mayor of Lon- 
don, the Lord Provost of Edinburgh, the Lord Mayor 
of Dublin, and the Lord Mayor of Cardiff, in which he 
advocated the holding of public meetings to make plain 
the justice of England's cause. The response was most 
enthusiastic. The offer of Mr. Asquith to assist this 
movement by addressing such meetings was accepted 
by the heads of the four cities, and in September the 
Prime Minister delivered four memorable addresses 
summoning Great Britain to arms. Thousands of peo- 
ple were turned away from the great Guildhall in the 
city of London on the evening of September 5, 1914, 
when the address known as The Call to Arms was de- 
livered. Through the throng that heard him, he spoke 
to the people not only of Engand but of the whole 
British Empire, calling them to rise as one to save 
Europe by their example. The patriotic ardor with 
which the address was received was truly prophetic of 
the zeal and unanimity of the military response. 



THE CALL TO ARMS 

H. H. Asquith 

My Lord Mayor and Citizens of London: It is 
three and a half years since I last had the honor of ad- 
dressing in this hall a gathering of the citizens. We were 
then met under the presidency of one of your predecessors, 
men of all creeds and parties, to celebrate and approve the 
joint declaration of the two great English-speaking states 



1 64 H. H. ASQUITH 

that for the future any differences between them should 
be settled, if not by agreement, at least by judicial inquiry 
and arbitration, and never in any circumstances by war. 
[Cheers.] Those of us who hailed that great Eirenicon 1 
between the United States and ourselves as a landmark on 
the road of progress were not sanguine enough to think, 
or even to hope, the the era of war was drawing to a 
close. But still less were we prepared to anticipate the 
terrible spectacle which now confronts us of a contest 
which for the number and importance of the powers 
engaged, the scale of their armaments and armies, the 
width of the theatre of conflict, the outpouring of blood 
and the loss of life, the incalculable toll of suffering levied 
upon non-combatants, the material and moral loss ac- 
cumulating day by day to the higher interests of civilized 
mankind — a contest which in every one of these aspects is 
without precedent in the annals of the world. [Hear, 
hear!] We were very confident three years ago in the 
rightness of our position, when we welcomed the new 
securities for peace. We are equally confident in it to-day, 
when reluctantly, and against our will, but with a clear 
judgment and a clean conscience, [cheers] we find our- 
selves involved with the whole strength of this empire in 
a bloody arbitration between might and right. The issue 
has passed out of the domain of argument into another 
field, but let me ask you, and through you the world out- 
side, what would have been our condition as a nation to- 
day if we had been base enough through timidity or 
through perverted calculation of self- interest, or through 
a paralysis of the sense of honor and duty, [cheers] if we 
had been base enough to be false to our word and faithless 
to our friends? 

Our eyes would have been turned at this moment with 
those of the whole civilized world to Belgium, a small 
state, which has lived for more than seventy years under 



THE CALL TO ARMS 165 

the several and collective guarantee to which we in com- 
mon with Prussia and Austria were parties, ami we should 
have seen at the instance and by the action of two of these 
guaranteeing powers her neutrality violated, her inde- 
pendence strangled, her territory made use of as affording 
the easiest and the most convenient road to a vyar of un- 
provoked aggression against France. We, the British 
people, would at this moment have been standing by w T ith 
folded arms and with such countenance as we could com- 
mand while this small and unprotected State, in defense of 
her vital liberties, made a heroic stand against overween- 
ing and overwhelming force ; we should have been admir- 
ing as detached spectators the siege of Liege, the steady 
and manful resistance of a small army to the occupation of 
their capital, with its splendid traditions and memories, 
the gradual forcing back of the patriotic defenders of their 
native land to the ramparts of Antwerp, countless out- 
rages inflicted by buccaneering levies exacted from the 
unoffending civil population, and, finally, the greatest 
crime committed against civilization and culture since the 
Thirty Years' War, the sack of Louvain, 2 [Cries of 
Shame!] with its buildings, its pictures, its unique library, 
its unrivaled associations — a shameless holocaust of irre- 
parable treasures lit up by blind barbarian vengeance. 
[Prolonged cheers.] What account should we, the Gov- 
ernment and the people of this country, have been able 
to render to the tribunal of our national conscience and 
sense of honor if, in defiance of our plighted and solemn 
obligations, we had endured, nay, if we had not done our 
best to prevent, yes, and to avenge, these intolerable out- 
rages? For my part I say that sooner than be a silent wit- 
ness — which means in effect a willing accomplice — of this 
tragic triumph of force over law and of brutality over 
freedom, I would see this country of ours blotted out of 
the pages of history. [Prolonged cheers.] 



166 H. H. ASQUITH 

That is only a phase — a lurid and illuminating phase 
in the contest in which we have been called by the man- 
date of duty and of honor to bear our part. The cynical 
violation of the neutrality of Belgium was, after all, but 
a step — the first step — in a deliberate policy of which, 
if not the immediate, the ultimate, and the not far dis- 
tant aim, was to crush the independence and autonomy 
of the free states of Europe. First Belgium, then Hol- 
land, then Switzerland, countries like our own, imbued 
and sustained with the spirit of liberty, were one after 
another to be bent to the yoke, and these ambitions were 
fed and fostered by a body of new doctrines and new 
philosophies preached by professors and learned men. 
The free and full self-development which to these small 
states, to ourselves, to our great and growing dominions 
over the seas, to our kinsmen across the Atlantic, is the 
well-spring and life-breath of national existence — that 
free self-development is the one capital offense in the code 
of those who have made force their supreme divinity, and 
who upon its altars are prepared to sacrifice both the 
gathered fruits and the potential germs of the unfettered 
human spirit. I use this language advisedly. This is 
not merely a material; it is also a spiritual conflict. 
[Cheers.] Upon its issues, everything that contains 
promise and hope, that leads to emancipation and a fuller 
liberty for the millions who make up the mass of man- 
kind, will be found sooner or later to depend. 

Let me now just for a moment turn to the actual situ- 
ation in Europe. How do we stand? For the last ten 
years, by what I believe to be happy and well-considered 
diplomatic arrangements, we have established friendly and 
increasingly intimate relations with the two powers, France 
and Russia, with whom, in days gone by, we have had in 
various parts of the world occasion for constant friction, 
and now and again for possible conflict. Those new and 



THE CALL TO ARMS 167 

better relations, based in the first instance upon business 
principles of give and take, matured into a settled temper 
of confidence and good-will. They were never in any 
sense or at any time, as I have frequently said in this 
hall, directed against other powers. No man in the his- 
tory of the world has ever labored more strenuously or 
more successfully than my right honorable friend Sir Ed- 
ward Grey :? [cheers] for that which is the supreme inter- 
est of the modern world, a general and abiding peace. It 
is, I venture to think, a very superficial criticism which 
suggests that under his guidance the policy of this country 
has ignored, still less that it has counteracted and ham- 
pered, the concert of Europe. It is little more than a 
year ago that under his presidency, in the stress and strain 
of the Balkan crisis, the ambassadors of all the great 
powers met here day after day curtailing the area of 
possible differences, reconciling warring ambitions and 
aims, and preserving against almost incalculable odds the 
general harmony. And it w r as in the same spirit and w T ith 
the same purpose, when a few weeks ago Austria delivered 
her ultimatum to Servia, that our foreign secretary put 
forward the proposal for a mediating conference between 
the four powers who were not directly concerned — Ger- 
many, France, Italy, and ourselves. If that proposal had 
been accepted, actual controversy would have been settled 
with honor to everybody, the whole of this terrible welter 
would have been avoided. [Hear, hear!] 

And w T ith whom does the responsibility rest [cries of 
The Kaiser!] for this refusal and for all the illimitable 
suffering which now confronts the world? One pow T er 
and one power only, and that power — Germany. [Loud 
hisses.] That is the front and origin of this world-wide 
catastrophe. We are persevering to the end. No one 
who has not been confronted as we were with the respon- 
sibility of determining the issues of peace and war can 



i68 H. H. ASQUITH 

realize the strength and energy and persistency with which 
we have labored for peace. We persevered by every ex- 
pedient that diplomacy could suggest, straining almost to 
the breaking point our most cherished friendships and 
obligations, even to the last, making effort upon effort, 
and hoping against hope. Then, and only then, when we 
were at last compelled to realize that the choice lay be- 
tween honor and dishonor, between treachery and good 
faith, w T hen at last we reached the dividing line which 
makes or mars a nation worthy of the name, it was then, 
and then only, that we declared for war. Is there any 
one in this hall or in this United Kingdom or in the vast 
empire of w T hich we here stand in the capital and centre 
who blames or repents our decision? [Cries of No!] 
For these reasons, as I believe, we must steel ourselves to 
the task, and in the spirit which animated our forefathers 
in their struggle against the domination of Napoleon we 
must and we shall persevere to the end. [Cheers.] 

It would be a criminal mistake to underestimate either 
the magnitude, the fighting quality, or the staying power 
of the forces which are arrayed against us. But it would 
be equally foolish and equally indefensible to belittle our 
own resources, whether for resistance or attack. Bel- 
gium has shown us by a memorable and a glorious example 
what can be done by a relatively small State when its 
citizens are animated and fired by the spirit of patriotism. 
In France and Russia we have as allies two of the great- 
est powers of the world engaged with us in a common 
cause, who do not mean to separate 4 themselves from us 
any more than we mean to separate ourselves from them. 
We have upon the seas the strongest and most magnificent 
fleet that has ever been seen. The expeditionary force 
which left our shores less than a month ago has never 
been surpassed, as its glorious achievements in the field 
have already made clear, not only in material and equip- 



THE CALL TO ARMS 169 

ment but in the physical and the moral quality of its con- 
stituents. [Cheers. | 

As regards the navy, I am sure my right honorable 
friend (Mr. Winston Churchill) will tell you there is 
happily little more to be done. I do not flatter it when 
I say that its superiority is equally marked in every de- 
partment and sphere of its activity, f Cheers.] We rely 
on it with the most absolute confidence, not only to guard 
our shores against the possibility of invasion, not only to 
seal up the gigantic battleships of the enemy in the in- 
glorious seclusion of his own ports, whence from time to 
time, he furtively steals forth to sow the seeds of mur- 
derous snares, which are more full of menace to neutral 
ships than to the British fleet. Our navy does all this, 
and while it is thirsting, I do not doubt, for that trial 
of strength in a fair and open fight, which is so far pru- 
dently denied it, it does a great deal more. It has hunted 
the German mercantile marine from the high seas. It 
has kept open our own sources of food supply and has 
largely curtailed those of the enemy, and when the few 
German crusers which still infest the more distant ocean 
routes have been disposed of, as they will be disposed of 
very soon, [cheers] it will achieve for British and neutral 
commerce passing backward and forward, from and to 
every part of our empire, a security as complete as it has 
ever enjoyed in the days of unbroken peace. Let us honor 
the memory of the gallant seamen who, in the pursuit of 
one or another of these varied and responsible duties, have 
already laid down their lives for their country. 

In regard to the army there is a call for a new, a con- 
tinuous, a determined, and a united effort. For, as the 
war goes on, we shall have not merely to replace the 
wastage caused by casualties, not merely to maintain our 
military power at its original level, but we must, if we 
are to play a worthy part, enlarge its scale, increase its 



170 H. H. ASQUITH 

numbers and multiply many times its effectiveness as a 
fighting instrument. The object of the appeal which I 
have made to you, my Lord Mayor, and to the other chief 
magistrates of our capital cities is to impress upon the 
people of the United Kingdom the imperious urgency 
of this supreme duty. Our self-governing dominions 
throughout the empire, without any solicitation on our 
part, have demonstrated with a spontaneousness and a 
unanimity unparalleled in history their determination to 
affirm their brotherhood with us and to make our cause 
their own. From Canada, from Australia, from New 
Zealand, from South Africa, and from Newfoundland, 
the children of the empire 5 assert, not as an obligation, 
but as a privilege, their right and their willingness to con- 
tribute money and material, and what is better than all, 
the strength and sinews, the fortunes, and the lives of 
their best manhood. [Cheers.] India, too, with no less 
alacrity, has claimed her share in the common task. Every 
class and creed, British and natives, Princes and people, 
Hindus and Mohammedans, vie with one another in noble 
and emulous rivalry. Two divisions of our magnificent 
Indian Army are already on their way. [Cheers.] We 
welcome with appreciation and affection their proffered 
aid. In an empire which knows no distinction of race 
or cause we all alike as subjects of the King-Emperor 
are joint and equal custodians of our common interests 
and fortunes. We are here to hail with profound and 
heartfelt gratitude their association, side by side and 
shoulder to shoulder, with our home and dominion troops, 
under the flag which is the symbol to all of a unity that 
a world in arms cannot dissever or dissolve. With these 
inspiring appeals and examples from our fellow-subjects 
all over the world, what are we doing and what ought we 
to do here at home? 

Mobilization was ordered 6 on the 4th of August ; imme- 



THE CALL TO ARMS 171 

diately afterward Lord Kitchener issued his call for IOO,- 
000 recruits for the regular army, which has been followed 
by a second call for another 100,000. The response up 
to to-day gives us between 250,000 and 300,000. I am 
glad to say that London has done its share. The total 
number of Londoners accepted is not less than 42,000. 
[Cheers.] I need hardly say that that appeal involves no 
disparagement or discouragement of the territorial force. 
The number of units in that force who have volunteered 
for foreign service is most satisfactory and grows every- 
day. We look to them with confidence to increase their 
numbers, to perfect their organization and training, and 
to play efficiently the part which has always been assigned 
to them, both offensive and defensive, in the military 
system of the empire. But to go back to the expansion of 
the regular arm}'. We want more men — men of the best 
fighting quality, and if for a moment the number who 
offer themselves and are accepted should prove to be in 
excess of those who can at once be adequately trained and 
equipped, do not let them doubt that prompt provision 
will be made for the incorporation of all willing and able 
men in the fighting forces of the kingdom. We want, 
first of all, men, and we shall endeavor to secure them. 
Men desiring to serve together shall, wdierever possible, 
be allotted to the same regiment or corps. The raising of 
battalions by counties or municipalities with this object 
will be in every way encouraged. But we want not less 
urgently a larger supply of ex-non-commissioned officers, 
and the pick of the men with whom in the past days they 
served, men, therefore, whom in most cases we shall be 
asking to give up regular employment and to return to 
the work of the State, which they alone are competent to 
do. The appeal we make is addressed quite as much 
to their employers as to the men themselves. The men 
ought to be absolutely assured of reinstatement 7 in their 



172 H. H. ASQUITH 

business at the end of the war. Finally, there are num- 
bers of commissioned officers now in retirement who are 
much experienced in the handling of troops and have 
served their country in the past. Let them come forward, 
too, and show their willingness, if need be, to train bodies 
of men for whom at the moment no cadre or unit can be 
found. 

I have little more to say. Of the actual progress of 
trie war I will not say anything, except that in my judg- 
ment in whatever direction we look there is abundant 
ground for pride and for confidence. I say nothing more, 
because I think we should all bear in mind that we are at 
present watching the flucutations of fortune only in the 
early stages of what is going to be a protracted struggle. 
We must learn to take long views, and to cultivate, above 
all, other faculties — those of patience, endurance, and 
steadfastness. Meanwhile, let us go, each of us, to his or 
her appropriate place in the great common task. Never 
had a people more or richer sources of encouragement and 
inspiration. Let us realize, first of all, that we are fight- 
ing as a united empire, in a cause worthy of the highest 
traditions of our race. Let us keep in mind the patient 
and indomitable seamen, who never relax for a moment, 
night or day, their stern vigil of the lonely sea. Let us 
keep in mind our gallant troops, who to-day, after a fort- 
night's continuous fighting under conditions which w T ould 
try the metal of the best army that ever took the field, 
maintain not only an undefeated but an unbroken front. 
[Cheers.] Finally, let us recall the memories of the great 
men and the great deeds of the past, commemorated, some 
of them, in the monuments which we see around us on 
these w r alls, not forgetting the dying message of the 
younger Pitt, his last public utterance, made at the table 
of one of your predecessors, my Lord Mayor, in this very 
hall: " England has saved herself by her exertions, and, 



THE CALL TO ARMs I?3 

will, as I trust, save Europe by her example." The I 
land of those days gave a noble answer to his appeal, and 
did not sheath the sword until, after nearly twenty years 
of fighting, the freedom of Europe was secured. Let us 
go and do likewise. [Prolonged cheers.] 

What influence had Asquith's The Call to Arms on the growth 
of American political ideals? 

From what points of view was the Great War an attack on 
democracy ? 

Point out practices in the government of Germany in 1914 
that were repudiated by the English previous even to American 
independence. 

Had it been customary in England for the prime minister to 
appeal directly to the people? 

What purpose was served by Asquith's reference in the first 
paragraph of his speech to the peace treaty with America? 

Compare Asquith's statement of Germany's aims with the 
accounts given by Lloyd-George and President Wilson. 

Comment briefly on Britain's attempts to avoid the war. 

What, according to Asquith, was the predominating motive 
that led England to engage in the war? 

Contrast the style of Asquith's speech with that of Patrick 
Henry's. Does the difference indicate corresponding degrees 
of sincerity- and determination. 

If you were to judge by the applause recorded in this speech, 
what motives or emotions chiefly animated the audience? 

What was the effect of the war on the solidarity of the 
British Empire ? 

How does this speech point to a democracy broader than any 
that had yet existed? 



PRESIDENT WILSON'S MESSAGE TO 
CONGRESS 

April 2, 1917 

When the Germans invaded Belgium, Americans were 
appalled by the ruthless violation of treaties and of 
the principles of humanity and international law. The 
suddenness of the attack and the effects of unsuspected 
German propaganda, however, clouded the issues and 
made it seem uncertain what course of action ought 
to be followed. It seemed best to remain neutral. Ac- 
cordingly early in August, 1914, President Wilson ap- 
pealed to the American people in these, words, " Every 
man who really loves America will act and speak in 
the true spirit of neutrality, which is the spirit of 
impartiality and fairness and friendliness to all con- 
cerned. " It is true that at this time there were Ameri- 
cans who fully appreciated the sublime heroism with 
which Belgium was holding back the foes of civiliza- 
tion, but the nation as a whole was not then ready for 
war. * 

For years America had devoted herself to thoughts 
of peace. The military establishment of Germany had 
been looked upon with amusement, for it was a com- 
mon American view that the last war in the history 
of the world had been fought. Very little was known 
about European politics and false statements made by 
German agents were easily believed. One-third of the 
population of the United States was foreign born and 
naturally as regards European affairs divided in their 
sympathies. In addition to the hundreds of thousands 

174 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 175 

of German-Americans who were hostile to the Allies, 
there were numerous other persons who for one reason 
or another were unfriendly to England or France or 
Russia. Even some of those citizens who thought it 

our moral and political duty to take the side of Bel- 
gium advised in 19 14 that America continue for a 
longer period its policy of neutrality since the Ameri- 
can army was so poorly equipped and was so pitifully 
small. 

The situation, however, gradually changed. When 
through diplomatic means Germany had failed to pre- 
vent American firms from selling munitions to her 
enemies, she endeavored through paid agents and spies 
to initiate a campaign of violence in the United States 
by inciting strikes, encouraging sabotage, and dynamit- 
ing buildings. Although such actions on Germany's 
part naturally cost her many supporters, the feeling 
against her did not become intensely bitter until Febru- 
ary, 191 5, when in utter lack of regard for interna- 
tional law, Germany announced that she was about to 
use submarines to destroy, instead of capture, enemy 
merchant vessels on sight and to prevent neutrals from 
trading with England and France. 

Even this contempt for American rights, neverthe- 
less, did not stir Americans so deeply as the growing 
conviction that England and France were fighting a 
battle for civilization. The cockneys of London, 
many of them miserable little men, had left their cabs 
and high stools in the offices, had sent their poorly 
nourished wives and children to the munition factories 
and the farms, and had gone to Ypres and the Somme 
and there had laid down their lives by thousands in 
support of the principles from which had grown the 
sweetness and light of American life. At Verdun the 
German hordes determined that France should be bled 



176 WOODROW WILSON 

white and Prussians would hew a way to the west. 
With poison gas and bayonet, with shell and machine- 
gun, they cut down division after division of French 
soldiers. The poilus blocked the roads with their 
bodies and the Germans did not pass. As the months 
went by it became clearer to most Americans that 
England and France were fighting our fight while we 
stood idly by. 

Meanwhile submarine activity was becoming more 
serious. After numerous vessels had been torpedoed 
with the loss of some American lives, the great liner 
Lusitania, carrying 1,918 men, women, and children, 
was sunk, May 7, 1917. Among the 1,154 passengers 
drowned were 114 Americans. So great was the hor- 
ror and resentment created throughout the country by 
this act that probably a majority of United States 
citizens believed that the time had come when America 
should enter the war to help the Allies. President 
Wilson, however, still cherished the hope that if 
America remained neutral the United States might be 
the means of reconciling the contending powers and 
thereby saving endless suffering and millions of lives. 
The President's forbearance and patience were sorely 
tried when soon after the destruction of the Lusitania 
other ships were sunk without any effort to save pas- 
sengers. His spirit can be compared only to that of 
Lincoln in the Civil War when resisting alike the taunts 
and slurs of radical abolitionists and the threats of 
Southern sympathizers, he waited with infinite patience 
until the time was fit before he issued his proclamation 
that the slaves were free. 

On January 31, 191 7, the German government an- 
nounced that the next day it would begin unrestricted 
submarine warfare of a far more ruthless character 
and would sink enemy and neutral ships alike if found 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 177 

in the proscribed zones. On February 3, 191 7' tlu> 
German ambassador at Washington was dismissed. 
On February 28, the Federal Secret Service made pub- 
lic the Zimmermann note in which Germany proposed 
to Mexico that she and Japan form a military alliance 
for the purpose of gaining territory from the United 
States. It was no longer possible for any American 
statesman, no matter how peace-loving, to defend these 
acts. At last the country was practically unanimous 
for armed resistance. In the world's history no na- 
tion able to protect itself had ever been more reluctant 
than the United States to relinquish a policy of peace 
and adopt a policy of war. 

Even under these circumstances German spies and 
sympathizers made a last effort to prevent action on 
the part of the United States. As Congress assem- 
bled in extraordinary session at the call of the Presi- 
dent, an attempt was made by German propagandists 
to create the impression that many citizens were still 
opposed to America's taking the part of the Allies. 
On April 2, 1917, however, in the presence of both 
houses of Congress assembled in joint session, the 
President with calmness and dignity delivered what is 
probably the most momentous Message ever spoken by 
an American executive. 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 

April 2, 1917 

Woodrow Wilson 

Gentlemen of the Congress: I have called the Con- 
gress into extraordinary session 1 because there are serious, 
very serious, choices of policy to be made, and made imme- 



178 WOODROW WILSON 

diately, which it was neither right nor constitutionally 
permissible 2 that I should assume the responsibility of 
making. 

On the third of February last I officially laid before 
you the extraordinary announcement of the Imperial Ger- 
man Government that on and after the first day of Febru- 
ary it was its purpose to put aside all restraints of law or 
of humanity and use its submarines to sink every vessel 
that sought to approach either the ports of Great Britain 
and Ireland or the western coast of Europe or any of 
the ports controlled by the enemies of Germany within the 
Mediterranean. That had seemed to be the object of the 
German submarine warfare earlier in the war, but since 
April of last year the Imperial Government had somewhat 
restrained the commanders of its undersea craft in con- 
formity with its promise then given to us 3 that passenger 
boats should not be sunk and that due warning would be 
given to all other vessels which its submarines might seek 
to destroy, when no resistance was offered or escape at- 
tempted, and care taken that their crews were given at 
least a fair chance to save their lives in their open boats. 
The precautions taken were meagre and haphazard 
enough, as was proved in distressing instance after in- 
stance in the progress of the cruel and unmanly business, 
but a certain degree of restraint was observed. The new 
policy has swept every restriction aside. Vessels of every 
kind, whatever their flag, their character, their cargo, their 
destination, their errand, have been ruthlessly sent to the 
bottom without warning and without thought of help or 
mercy for those on board, the vessels of friendly neutrals 
along with those of belligerents. Even hospital ships and 
ships carrying relief to the sorely bereaved and stricken 
people of Belgium, though the latter were provided with 
safe conduct through the proscribed areas by the German 
Government itself and were distinguished by unmistakable 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 179 

marks of identity, have been sunk * with the same reckless 
lack of compassion or of principle. 

I was for a little while unable to believe that such things 
would in fact be done by any government that had hitherto 
subscribed to the humane practices of civilized nations. 
International law had its origin in the attempt to set up 
some law which would be respected and observed upon the 
seas, where no nation had right of dominion and where 
lay the free highways of the world. By painful stage after 
stage has that law T been built up, with meager enough re- 
sults, indeed, after all was accomplished that could be 
accomplished, but always with a clear view T , at least, of 
what the heart and conscience of mankind demanded. 
This minimum of right the German Government has 
swept aside under the plea of retaliation and necessity and 
because it had no weapons which it could use at sea except 
these which it is impossible to employ as it is employing 
them without throwing to the winds all scruples of hu- 
manity or of respect for the understandings that were 
supposed to underlie the intercourse of the world. I am 
not now thinking of the loss of property involved, immense 
and serious as that is, but only of the wanton and whole- 
sale destruction of the lives of non-combatants, men, 
women, and children, engaged in pursuits which have 
always, even in the darkest periods of modern history, been 
deemed innocent and legitimate. Property can be paid 
for; the lives of peaceful and innocent people can not 
be. The present German submarine warfare against com- 
merce is a w r arfare against mankind. 

It is a war against all nations. American ships have 
been sunk, American lives taken, in ways which it has 
stirred us very deeply to learn of, but the ships and peo- 
ple of other neutral and friendly nations have been sunk 
and overwhelmed in the waters in the same way. There 
has been no discrimination. The challenge is to all man- 



180 WOODROW WILSON 

kind. Each nation must decide for itself how it will meet 
it. The choice we make for ourselves must be made with 
a moderation of counsel and a temperateness of judgment 
befitting our character and our motives as a nation. We 
must put excited feeling away. Our motive will not be 
revenge or the victorious assertion of the physical might 
of the nation, but only the vindication of right, of human 
right, of which w r e are only a single champion. 

When I addressed the Congress on the twenty-sixth of 
February last I thought that it would suffice to assert 
our neutral rights w T ith arms, our right to use the seas 
against unlawful interference, our right to keep our peo- 
ple safe against unlawful violence. But armed neutrality, 
it now appears, is impracticable. Because submarines are 
in effect outlaws w r hen used as the German submarines 
have been used against merchant shipping, it is impossible 
to defend ships against their attacks as the law of nations 
has assumed that merchantmen would defend themselves 
against privateers or cruisers, visible craft giving chase 
upon the open sea. It is common prudence in such circum- 
stances, grim necessity indeed, to endeavor to destroy them 
before they have shown their own intention. They must 
be dealt with upon sight, if dealt with at all. The Ger- 
man Government denies the right of neutrals to use arms 
at all within the areas of the sea which it has proscribed, 
even in the defense of rights which no modern publicist 
has ever before questioned their right to defend. The 
intimation is conveyed that the armed guards which we 
have placed on our merchant ships will be treated as be- 
yond the pale of law and subject to be dealt with as 
pirates would be. Armed neutrality* is ineffectual enough 
at best; in such circumstances and in the face of such 
pretentions it is worse than ineffectual : it is likely only to 
produce what it was meant to prevent; it is practically 
certain to draw us into the war without either the rights 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 181 

or the effectiveness of belligerents. There is one choice 
we cannot make, we are incapable of making: we will not 
choose the path of submission and suffer the most sacred 
rights of our nation and our people to be ignored or vio- 
lated. The wrongs against which we now array ourselves 
are no common wrongs; they cut to the very roots of hu- 
man life. 

With a profound sense of the solemn and even tragical 
character of the step I am taking and of the grave respon- 
sibilities which it involves, but in unhesitating obedience 
to what I deem my constitutional duty, I advise that the 
Congress declare the recent course of the Imperial Ger- 
man Government to be in fact nothing less than war 
against the government and people of the United States; 
that it formally accept the status of belligerent which has 
thus been thrust upon it; and that it take immediate steps 
not only to put the country in a more thorough state of 
defense but also to exert all its power and employ all its 
resources to bring the government of the German Empire 
to terms and end the war. 

What this will involve is clear. It will involve the 
utmost practicable cooperation in counsel and action with 
the governments now at war with Germany, and, as in- 
cident to that, the extension to those Governments of 
the most liberal financial credits, in order that our re- 
sources may, so far as possible, be added to theirs. It 
will involve the organization and mobilization of all the 
material resources of the country to supply the materials 
of war and serve the incidental needs of the nation in the 
most abundant, and yet the most economical and efficient, 
way possible. 

It will involve the immediate full equipment of the 
navy in all respects, but particularly in supplying it 
with the best means of dealing with the enemy's sub- 
marines. It will involve the immediate addition to the 



182 WOODROW WILSON 

armed forces of the United States, already provided for 
by law in case of war, of at least 500,000 men, who 
should, in my opinion, be chosen upon the principle of 
universal liability to service, and also the authorization 
of subsequent additional increments of equal force so soon 
as they may be needed and can be handled in training. 

It will involve also, of course, the granting of adequate 
credits to the government, sustained, I hope, so far as they 
can equitably be sustained by the present generation, by 
well-conceived taxation. I say sustained so far as may be 
equitable by taxation because it seems to me that it would 
be most unwise to base the credits which will now be 
necessary entirely on borrowed money. It is our duty, I 
must respectfully urge, to protect our people so far as 
we may against the very serious hardships and evils which 
would be likely to arise out of the inflation which would 
be produced by vast loans. In carrying out the measures 
by which these things are to be accomplished we should 
keep constantly in mind the wisdom of interfering as 
little as possible in our own preparation and in the equip- 
ment of our own military forces with the duty — for it 
will be a very practical duty — of supplying the nations 
already at war with Germany with the materials which 
they can obtain only from us or by our assistance. They 
are in the field and we should help them in every way to 
be effective there. 

I shall take the liberty of suggesting, through the sev- 
eral executive departments of the government for the 
consideration of your committees, measures for the 
accomplishment of the several objects I have mentioned. 
I hope that it will be your pleasure to deal with them as 
having been framed after very careful thought by the 
branch of the government upon which the responsibility 
of conducting the war and safeguarding the nation will 
most directly fall. 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 183 

While we do these things, these deeply momentous 
things, let us he very clear, and make very clear to all the 
world what our motives and our objects are. n My own 
thought has not been driven from its habitual and normal 
course by the unhappy events of the last two months, and 
I do not believe that the thought of the nation has been 
altered or clouded by them. I have exactly the same thing 
in mind now that I had in mind when I addressed the 
Senate on the 22d of January last; the same that I had in 
mind when I addressed the Congress on the 3d of Febru- 
ary and on the 26th of February. Our object now, as 
then, is to vindicate the principles of peace and justice in 
the life of the world as against selfish and autocratic 
power and to set up amongst the really free and self- 
governed peoples of the world such a concert of purpose 
and of action as will henceforth ensure the observance of 
those principles. Neutrality is no longer feasible or desir- 
able where the peace of the world is involved and the 
freedom of its peoples, and the menace to that peace and 
freedom lies in the existence of autocratic governments 
backed by organized force which is controlled wholly by 
their will, not by the will of their people. We have seen 
the last of neutrality in such circumstances. We are at the 
beginning of an age in which it will be insisted that the 
same standards of conduct and of responsibility for wrong 
done shall be observed among nations and their govern- 
ments that are observed among the individual citizens of 
civilized states. 

We have no quarrel with the German people. We 
have no feeling towards them but one of sympathy and 
friendship. It was not upon their impulse that their gov- 
ernment acted in entering this war. It was not with their 
previous knowledge or approval. It was a war deter- 
mined upon as wars used to be determined upon in the 
old, unhappy days ,] when peoples were nowhere consulted 



1 84 WOODROW WILSON 

by their rulers and wars were provoked and waged in the 
interest of dynasties or of little groups of ambitious men 
who were accustomed to use their fellow men as pawns 
and tools. Self-governed nations do not fill their neigh- 
bor states with spies or set the course of intrigue to bring 
about some critical posture of affairs which will give them 
an opportunity to strike and make conquest. Such designs 
can be successfully worked out only under cover and 
where no one has the right to ask questions. Cunningly 
contrived plans of deception or aggression, carried, it may 
be, from generation to generation, can be worked out and 
kept from the light only within the privacy of courts or 
behind the carefully guarded confidences of a narrow and 
privileged class. They are happily impossible where public 
opinion commands and insists upon full information con- 
cerning all the nation's affairs. 

A steadfast concert for peace can never be maintained 
except by a partnership of democratic nations. No auto- 
cratic government could be trusted to keep faith within it 
or observe its covenants. It must be a league of honour, 
a partnership of opinion. Intrigue would eat its vitals 
away; the plottings of inner circles who could plan what 
they would and render account to no one would be a cor- 
ruption seated at its very heart. Only free peoples can 
hold their purpose and their honour steady to a common 
end and prefer the interests of mankind to any narrow 
interest of their own. 

One of the things that has served to convince us that 
the Prussian autocracy was not and could never be our 
friend is that from the very outset of the present war 
it has filled our unsuspecting communities and even our 
offices of government with spies and set criminal intrigues 
everywhere afoot against our national unity of counsel, 
our peace within and without, our industries and our 
commerce. Indeed, it is now evident that its spies were 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 185 

here even before the war began, and it is unhappily not 
a matter of conjecture but a fact proved in our courts 
of justice that the intrigues which have more than once 
come perilously near to disturbing the peace and dis- 
locating the industries of the country have been carried 
on at the instigation, with the support, and even under 
the personal direction of official agents of the Imperial 
Government accredited to the Government of the United 
States. Even in checking these things and trying to 
extirpate them we have sought to put the most generous 
interpretation possible upon them because we knew that 
their source lay, not in any hostile feeling or purpose of 
the German people tow T ard us (who were, no doubt, as 
ignorant of them as we ourselves w T ere) but only in the 
selfish designs of a government that did what it pleased 
and told its people nothing. But they have played their 
part in serving to convince us at last that that government 
entertains no real friendship for us and means to act 
against our peace and security at its convenience. That 
it means to stir up enemies against us at our very doors the 
intercepted note 7 to the German Minister at Mexico 
City is eloquent evidence. 

We are accepting this challenge of hostile purpose be- 
cause we know that in such a government, following 
such methods, we can never have a friend ; and that in the 
presence of its organized power, ahvays lying in w r ait to 
accomplish we know not what purpose, there can be no 
assured security for the democratic governments of the 
world. We are now about to accept gauge of battle with 
this natural foe of liberty, and shall, if necessary, spend 
the whole force of the nation to check and nullify its pre- 
tensions and its power. We are glad, now that w r e see the 
facts with no veil of false pretense about them, to fight 
thus for the ultimate peace of the world and for the libera- 
tion of its peoples — the German people included — for the 



1 86 WOODROW WILSON 

rights of nations great and small and the privilege of men 
everywhere to choose their way of life and of obedience. 
The world must be made safe for democracy. Its peace 
must be planted upon the trusted foundations of political 
liberty. We have no selfish ends to serve. We desire 
no conquest, no dominion. We seek no indemnities for 
ourselves, no material compensation for the sacrifices we 
shall freely make. We are but one of the champions 
of the rights of mankind. We shall be satisfied when 
those rights have been made as secure as the faith and the 
freedom of the nation can make them. 

Just because we fight without rancor and without self- 
ish objects, seeking nothing for ourselves but what we 
shall wish to share with all free peoples, we shall, I feel 
confident, conduct our operations as belligerents without 
passion and ourselves observe with proud punctilio the 
principles of right and of fair play we profess to be 
fighting for. 

I have said nothing of the governments allied with the 
Imperial Government of Germany because they have not 
made war upon us or challenged us to defend our right 
and our honor. The Austro-Hungarian Government has, 
indeed, avowed its unqualified indorsement and acceptance 
of the reckless and lawless submarine warfare adopted now 
without disguise by the Imperial German Government, 
and it has therefore not been possible for this government 
to receive Count Tarnowski, the Ambassador recently ac- 
credited to this government by the Imperial and Royal 
Government of Austria-Hungary; but that government 
has not actually engaged in warfare against citizens of the 
United States on the seas, and I take the liberty, for the 
present at least, of postponing a discussion of our relations 
with the authorities at Vienna. We enter this war only 
where we are clearly forced into it because there are no 
other means of defending our rights. 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 187 

It will be all the easier for us to conduct ourselves as 
belligerents in a high spirit of right and fairness because 

we act without animus, not in enmity towards a people or 
With tbe desire to bring any injury or disadvantage upon 
them, but only in armed opposition to an irresponsible 
government which has thrown aside all considerations of 
humanity and of right and is running amuck. We are, 
let me say again, the sincere friends of the German people, 
and shall desire nothing so much as the early reestablish- 
ment of intimate relations of mutual advantage between 
us, — however hard it may be for them, for the time being, 
to believe that this is spoken from our hearts. We have 
borne with their present government through all these 
bitter months because of that friendship, — exercising a 
patience and forbearance which w T ould otherwise have 
been impossible. We shall, happily, still have an oppor- 
tunity to prove that friendship in our daily attitude and 
actions towards the millions of men and women of Ger- 
man birth and native sympathy who live amongst us and 
share our life, and we shall be proud to prove it towards 
all who are in fact loyal to their neighbors and to the 
government in the hour of test. They are, most of them, 
as true and loyal Americans as if they had never known 
any other fealty or allegiance. They will be prompt to 
stand with us in rebuking and restraining the few who 
may be of a different mind and purpose. If there should 
be disloyalty, it will be dealt with with a firm hand of 
stern repression ; but, if it lifts its head at all, it will lift 
it only here and there and without countenance except 
from a lawless and malignant few. 

It is a distressing and oppressive duty, Gentlemen of 
the Congress, which I have performed in thus addressing 
you. There are, it may be, many months of fiery trial 
and sacrifice ahead of us. It is a fearful thing to lead 
this great peaceful people into war, into the most terrible 



188 WOODROW WILSON 

and disastrous of all wars, civilization itself seeming to 
be in the balance. But the right is more precious than 
peace, and we shall fight for the things which we have 
always carried nearest our hearts, — for democracy, for the 
right of those who submit to authority to have a voice in 
their own governments, for the rights and liberties of 
small nations, for a universal dominion of right by such a 
concert of free peoples as shall bring peace and safety to 
all nations and make the world itself at last free. To 
such a task we can dedicate our lives and our fortunes, 
everything that we are and everything that we have, with 
the pride of those who know that the day has come when 
America is privileged to spend her blood and her might 
for the principles that gave her birth and happiness and 
the peace which she has treasured. God helping her, she 
can do no other. 8 

Who in America has the power to declare war? 

What were the " choices of policy " before Congress at the 
time this speech was delivered? 

Could President Wilson have made a distinction between the 
German people and the German government if the German 
government had been truly democratic? 

Premier Asquith in The Call to Arms said that England in 
entering the war was actuated by no narrow or selfish na- 
tionalism. Is President Wilson equally altruistic in outlining 
America's course? 

The United States first guarded its own liberty; later it 
attempted to protect weak American republics; finally it helped 
to make the world safe for democracy. Was this expansion 
of its sphere of action the result of a growing moral conscious- 
ness, or was it due to other influences? 

Did President Wilson advocate a new principle in inter- 
national law when he maintained that " the same standards of 
conduct and responsibility for wrong done should be observed 
among nations and their governments that are observed among 
the individual citizens of civilized states"? 



THE MEANING OF AMERICA'S ENTRANCE 
INTO THE WAR 

April 12, 1917 

The news that the American Congress had declared 
war against Germany was received with joy and en- 
thusiasm throughout France and England. The Lon- 
don papers were rilled with articles of appreciation and 
with accounts of the material and moral aid that was 
about to come to the Allies. It was the general opinion 
of English statesmen that the entrance of America into 
the struggle was the most important event of the war. 
Ex-premier Asquith said that a day had dawned whose 
M sun shall not set until the two great English-speaking 
democracies can rejoice together, as fellow-workers 
and fellow-combatants, over the triumph of freedom 
and of right." 

At the American Luncheon Club, on April 12, 1917, 
a great company of distinguished Americans and 
Britons gathered to celebrate America's entrance into 
the war. It was said that no unofficial social event 
within a generation had brought together more men of 
prominence than were present on this occasion. After 
the cloth had been removed and toasts to President 
Wilson and King George had been drunk with much 
enthusiasm. Ambassador Page, who was presiding, 
spoke of the President's recent message to Congress. 
" From all of the states, from the states of the great 
Mississippi valley, from the South and from the Pacific 
they will come — as many millions as you need. We 

189 



igo DAVID LLOYD-GEORGE 

come in answer only to the high call of duty and not 
for any national reward ; not for territory, not for in- 
demnity or conquest ; not for anything except the 
high duty to succor democracy when it is desperately 
assailed." 

The reply made by Premier Lloyd-George to the 
words of Ambassador Page is one of the most impor- 
tant historical documents brought forth by the great 
struggle for democracy. It is known as Lloyd- 
George's speech on The Meaning of America's En- 
trance into the War. 



THE MEANING OF AMERICA'S ENTRANCE 
INTO THE WAR 

David Lloyd-George 

I am in the happy position of being, T think, the first 
Prime minister of the Crown who, speaking on behalf 
of the people of this country, can salute the American 
nation as comrades in arms. I am glad ; I am proud. I 
am glad not merely because of the stupendous resources 
which this great nation will bring to the succor of the 
alliance, but I rejoice as a democrat that the advent of 
the United States into this war gives the final stamp and 
seal to the character of the conflict as a struggle against 
military autocracy throughout the world. 

This was the note which ran through the great deliver- 
ance of President Wilson. It was echoed, Sir, in your 
resounding words to-day. The United States of America 
have the noble tradition never broken, of having never 
engaged in war except for liberty. And this is the great- 
est struggle for liberty that they have ever embarked 
upon. 1 am not at all surprised, when one recalls the 



AMERICA'S ENTRANCE INTO THE WAR 191 

wars of the past, that America took its time to make up 
its mind about the character of this struggle. In Europe 
most of the great wars of the past were waged for dynastic 
aggrandizement and conquest. No wonder when this 
great war started that there were some elements of sus- 
picion still lurking in the minds of the people of the 
United States of America. There were those who thought 
perhaps that Kings were at their old tricks, and although 
they saw the gallant Republic of France fighting, they — 
some of them perhaps — regarded it as the poor victim of 
a conspiracy of monarchical swashbucklers. 1 The fact 
that the United States of America has made up its mind, 
finally makes it abundantly clear to the w T orld that this 
is no struggle of that character, but a great fight for hu- 
man liberty. 

They naturally did not know at first what w T e had 
endured in Europe for years from this military caste in 
Prussia. It never has reached the United States of 
America. Prussia was not a democracy. The Kaiser 
promises that it will be a democracy after the war. I 
think he is right. But Prussia not merely was not a 
democracy. Prussia was not a state; Prussia was an 
army. It had great industries that had been highly de- 
veloped ; a great educational system ; it had its univer- 
sities; it had developed its science. 

All these were subordinate to the one great predomi- 
nant purpose, the purpose of an all-conquering army 
which was to intimidate the world. The army was the 
spear-point of Prussia ; the rest was but the gilded haft. 
That was what we had to deal with in these old coun- 
tries. It was an army that in recent times had waged 
three wars, all of conquest, 2 and the unceasing tramp 
of its legions through the streets of Prussia, on the parade 
grounds of Prussia, had gone to the Prussian head. The 
Kaiser, when he witnessed it on a grand scale at his re- 



i 9 2 DAVID LLOYD-GEORGE 

views, got drunk with the sound of it. He delivered the 
law to the world as if Potsdam were another Sinai, and 
he was uttering the law from the thunder clouds. 

But make no mistake. Europe was uneasy. Europe 
was half intimidated. Europe was anxious. Europe was 
apprehensive. We knew the whole time what it meant. 
What we did not know was the moment it would come. 

This is the menace ; this is the apprehension from which 
Europe had suffered for over fifty years. It paralyzed 
the beneficent activity of all states, which ought to be 
devoted to concentrating on the well-being of their peo- 
ples. They had to think about this menace, which was 
there constantly as a cloud ready to burst over the land. 
No one can tell except Frenchmen what they endured 
from this tyranny, patiently, gallantly, with dignity, till 
the hour of deliverance came. 

I have been asking myself the question, Why did Ger- 
many deliberately, in the third year of the war, provoke 
America to this declaration and to this action — deliber- 
ately, resolutely ? It has been suggested that the reason 
was that there were certain elements in American life 
which they were under the impression would make it im- 
possible for the United States to declare war. That I 
can hardly believe. But the answer has been afforded by 
Marshal von Hindenburg himself, in the very remarkable 
interview which appeared in the press, I think, only this 
morning. 

He depended clearly on one of two things. First, that 
the submarine campaign, would have destroyed interna- 
tional shipping to such an extent that England would 
have been put out of business before America was ready. 
According to his computation, America can not be ready 
for twelve months. He does not know America. In the 
alternative, that when America is ready, at the end of 
twelve months, with her army, she will have no ships to 



AMERICA'S ENTRANCE INTO THE WAR 193 

transport that army to the field of battle. In von Hin- 
denburg's words, " America carries no weight," I suppose 
he means she has no ships to carry weight. On that, un- 
doubtedly, they are reckoning. 

Well, it is not wise always to assume that even when 
the German General Staff, which has miscalculated so 
often, makes a calculation it has no grounds for it. It 
therefore behooves the whole of the Allies, Great Britain 
and America in particular, to see that the reckoning of 
von Hindenburg is as false as the one he made about his 
famous line,, which we have broken already. 

The road to victory, the guarantee of victory, the abso- 
lute assurance of victory is to be found in one word — 
ships; and a second w T ord — ships; and a third word — 
ships. And with that quickness of apprehension which 
characterizes your nation, Mr. Chairman, I see that they 
fully realize that, and to-day I observe that they have 
already made arrangements to build one thousand 3,000- 
tonners for the Atlantic. I think that the German mili- 
tary advisers must already begin to realize that this is 
another of the tragic miscalculations which are going to 
lead them to disaster and to ruin. But you will pardon 
me for emphasizing that. We are a slow people in these 
islands — slow and blundering — but we get there. You 
get there sooner, and that is why I am glad to see you in. 

But may I say that we have been in this business for 
three years? We have, as we generally do, tried every 
blunder. In golfing phraseology, we have got into every 
bunker. But we have got a good niblick. We are right 
out on the course. But may I respectfully suggest that it 
is worth America's w T hile to study our blunders, so as to 
begin just where we are now and not where we were 
three years ago? That is an advantage. In war, time 
has as tragic a significance as it has in sickness. A step 
which, taken to-day, may lead to assured victory, taken 



194 DAVID LLOYD-GEORGE 

to-morrow may barely avert disaster. All the Allies have 
discovered that. It was a new country for us all. It 
was trackless, mapless. We had to go by instinct. But 
we found the way and I am glad that you are sending 
your great naval and military experts here, just to ex- 
change experiences with men who have been through all 
the dreary, anxious crises of the last three years. 

America has helped us even to win the battle of Arras. 
She has been making guns, making ammunition, giving 
us machinery to prepare both; she has supplied us with 
steel, and she has got all that organization and she has 
got that wonderful facility, adaptability, and resourceful- 
ness of the great people who inhabit that great continent. 
Ah! It was a bad day for military autocracy in Prussia 
when it challenged the great Republic of the West. We 
know what America can do, and we also know that now 
she is in it, she will do it. She will wage an effective and 
successful w T ar. 

There is something more important. She will insure a 
beneficent peace. I attach great importance — and I am 
the last man in the world, knowing for three years what 
our difficulties have been, what our anxieties have been, 
and what our fears have been — I am the last man to say 
that the succor which is given us from America is not 
something in itself to rejoice in, and to rejoice in greatly. 
But I do not mind saying that I rejoice even more in the 
knowledge that America is going to win the right to be at 
the conference table when the terms of peace are being 
discussed. That conference will settle the destiny of 
nations — the course of human life — for God knows how 
many ages. It would have been tragic for mankind if 
America had not been there, and there with all the influ- 
ence, all the power, and the right which she now has won 
by flinging herself into this great struggle. 

I can see peace coming now — not a peace which will 



AMERICA'S ENTRANCE INTO THE WAR [93 

be the beginning of war, not a peace which will be an 
endless preparation for strife and bloodshed ; but a real 
peace. The world is an old world. It has been rocking 
and swaying like an ocean, and Europe — poor Europe! — 
has always lived under the shadow of the sword. When 
this war began, two-thirds of Europe was under auto- 
cratic rule. Now it is the other way about; and democ- 
racy means peace. The democracy of France did not 
want war; the democracy of Italy hesitated long before 
they entered the war; the democracy of this country 
shrank from it — shrank and shuddered — and never would 
have entered the caldron had it not been for the inva- 
sion of Belgium. The democracies sought for peace; 
strove for peace. If Prussia had been a democracy there 
WT>uld have been no war. Strange things have happened 
in this war. There are stranger things to come, and 
they are coming rapidly. 

There are times in history when this world spins so 
leisurely along its destined course that it seems for cen- 
turies to be at a standstill ; but there are also times when 
it rushes along at a giddy pace, covering the track of 
centuries in a year. Those are the times we are living 
now. Six weeks ago Russia was an autocracy; she is 
now one of the most advanced democracies in the world. 
To-day we are w r aging the most devastating war that the 
world has ever seen ; to-morrow — perhaps not a distant 
to-morrow — war may be abolished forever from the cate- 
gory of human crimes. This may be something like the 
fierce outburst of winter which we are now witnessing 
before the complete triumph of the sun. It is written of 
those gallant men who won that victory Monday 3 — men 
from Canada, from Australia, and from this old country, 
which has proved that in spite of its age it is not decrepit 
— it is written of those gallant men that they attacked 
with the dawn — fit work for the dawn! — to drive out of 



ig6 DAVID LLOYD-GEORGE 

forty miles of French soil those miscreants who had de- 
filed it for three years. " They attacked with the dawn." 
Significant phrase! 

The breaking up of the dark rule of the Turk, which 
for centuries had clouded the sunniest land in the world, 
the freeing of Russia from an oppression which had cov- 
ered it like a shroud for so long, the great declaration of 
President Wilson coming with the might of the great 
nation which he represents into the struggle for liberty are 
heralds of the dawn. " They attacked with the dawn," 
and these men are marching forward in the full radiance 
of that dawn, and soon Frenchman and Americans, Brit- 
ish, Italians, Russians, yea, and Serbians, Belgians, Mon- 
tenegrins, will emerge into the full light of a perfect day. 

Compare Lloyd-George's literary and oratorical style with 
that of President Wilson. 

Had the United States ever formed a military alliance with 
Great Britain previous to this war? 

Show, if you can, how all the wars in which America en- 
gaged had liberty for their objective. 

What was Lloyd-George's meaning when he said " democracy 
means peace "? 

Did America, as Lloyd-George hoped, profit by England's 
mistakes? 

Compare the peroration with the closing of one of Wilson's 
great addresses. 

What effect was produced in England by America's entrance 
into the war? 



PRESIDENT WILSON'S FLAG DAY SPEECH 

June 14, 1917 

As soon as Congress had passed the resolution declar- 
ing war with Germany, the United States government 
began to put forth its utmost resources to prepare an 
army. It seemed best to adopt universal military 
service, since volunteer service was neither efficient nor 
truly democratic. On May 18, 1917, Congress with 
some opposition passed the selective draft law; and 
the President issued a proclamation in which he said 
the word conscription was used, not because any were 
unwilling. It signified " rather a selection from a na- 
tion which has volunteered in mass." 

The hopes thus expressed were realized. On June 
5, the day of registration, " ten million men, rich and 
poor alike, left their occupations and responded to the 
call quietly, gravely, willingly." As they prepared to 
leave their homes and all that they most prized, they 
could not help considering whether country and insti- 
tutions were worth the sacrifice. The result of their 
deliberation was a more complete devotion, a more 
ardent patriotism, and a deeper reverence for the flag. 

It was, therefore, to a nation serious-minded and 
deeply devoted to its new duties, that President Wilson 
spoke on June 14, 1917. It had been planned, in con- 
nection with an elaborate celebration of Flag Day in 
the Capital city of the nation, that the President should 
deliver an address in the park near Washington Monu- 
ment. The weather proved to be unfavorable. Sev- 
eral thousand people, nevertheless, gathered in the rain 

197 



ig8 WOODROW WILSON 

about the speaker's stand and awaited eagerly the ad- 
dress of the Chief Executive. Most of the members 
of the cabinet were present. Robert L. Lansing, sec- 
retary of state, introduced the speaker. The President 
made use of the occasion to speak to those who were 
soon to follow the flag into foreign lands of the occur- 
rences which had caused the nation to cast aside its 
old traditions and adopt new views. He told of the 
evils to be overcome, and spoke eloquently of purposes 
and principles that were destined, with the help of our 
army, to bring a better day to the world and to add a 
new luster to the flag. 



THE FLAG DAY SPEECH 

Woodrow Wilson 

My Fellow Citizens : We meet to celebrate Flag Day 1 
because this flag which we honor and under which we 
serve is the emblem of our unity, our power, our thought 
and purpose as a nation. It has no other character 2 than 
that which we give it from generation to generation. 
The choices are ours. It floats in majestic silence above 
the hosts that execute those choices, whether in peace or 
in war. And yet, though silent, it speaks to us — speaks to 
us of the past, of the men and women who went before us 
and of the records they wrote upon it. We celebrate the 
day of its birth ; and from its birth until now it has wit- 
nessed a great history, has floated on high the symbol of 
great events, of a great plan of life worked out by a 
great people. We are about to carry it into battle, to lift 
it where it will draw the fire of our enemies. We are 
about to bid thousands, hundreds of thousands, it may be 
millions of our men, the young, the strong, the capable 



THE FLAG DAY SPEECH i<n 

men of the Nation, to go forth and die beneath it on 
fields of blood far away — for what? For some unaccus- 
tomed thing? For something for which it has never 
sought the fire before? American armies were never be- 
fore sent across the seas. Why are they sent now? For 
some new purpose for which this great flag has never been 
carried before, or for some old, familiar, heroic purpose for 
which it has seen men, its own men, die on every battle 
field upon which Americans have borne arms since the 
Revolution ? 

These are questions which must be answered. We are 
Americans. We in our turn serve America, and can 
serve her with no private purpose. We must use her 
flag as she has always used it. We are accountable at 
the bar of history and must plead in utter frankness what 
purpose it is we seek to serve. It is plain enough how 
we were forced into the w r ar. The extraordinary insults 
and aggressions of the Imperial German Government left 
us no self-respecting choice but to take up arms in defense 
of our rights as a free people and of our honor as a 
sovereign government. The military masters of Ger- 
many denied us the right to be neutral. They filled our 
unsuspecing communities w T ith vicious spies and con- 
spirators and sought to corrupt the opinion of our people 
in their own behalf. When they found that they could 
not do that their agents diligently spread sedition among 
us and sought to draw our own citizens from their al- 
legiance — and some of these agents were men connected 
with the official embassy of the German Government itself 
here in our own capital. 3 They sought by violence to 
destroy our industries and arrest our commerce. They 
tried to incite Mexico to take up arms against us and to 
draw Japan into a hostile alliance with her — and that, not 
by indirection by by direct suggestion from the Foreign 
Office in Berlin. They impudently denied us the use of 



aoo WOODROW WILSON 

the high seas and repeatedly executed their threat that 
they would send to their death any of our people who ven- 
tured to approach the coasts of Europe. And many of our 
own people were corrupted. Men began to look upon 
their own neighbors with suspicion and to wonder in their 
hot resentment and surprise whether there was any com- 
munity in which hostile intrigue did not lurk. What 
great nation in such circumstances would not have taken 
up arms? Much as we had desired peace it was denied 
us, and not of our own choice. This flag under which 
we serve would have been dishonored had we withheld 
our hand. 

But that is only part of the story. We know now as 
clearly as we knew before we were ourselves engaged 
that we are not the enemies of the German people and 
that they are not our enemies. They did not originate or 
desire this hideous war or wish that we should be drawn 
into it; and we are vaguely conscious that we are fighting 
their cause, as they will some day see it, as well as our 
own. They are themselves in the grip of the same sinister 
power that has now at last stretched its ugly talons out 
and drawn blood from us. The whole world is at war 
because the whole world is in the grip of that power and 
is trying out the great battle which shall determine 
whether it is to be brought under its mastery or fling itself 
free. 

The war was begun by the military masters of Ger- 
many, who proved to be also the masters of Austria- 
Hungary. These men have never regarded nations as 
peoples, men, women, and children of like blood and 
framed as themselves, for whom governments existed 
and in whom governments had their life. They have 
regarded them merely as serviceable organizations which 
they could by force or intrigue bend or corrupt to their 
own purpose. They have regarded the smaller states in 



THE FLAG DAY SPEECH 201 

particular and the peoples who could be overwhelmed by 
force as their natural tools and instruments of domina- 
tion. Their purpose has long been avowed. The states- 
men of other nations, to whom that purpose was incredible, 
paid little attention ; regarded what German professors 
expounded in their class rooms, and German writers set 
forth to the world as the goal of German policy, as 
rather the dream of minds detached from practical affairs, 
as preposterous private conceptions of German destiny, 
than as the actual plans of responsible rulers; but the 
rulers of Germany themselves knew all the while what 
concrete plans, what well-advanced intrigues, lay back 
of what the professors and the writers w r ere saying, and 
were glad to go forward unmolested, filling the thrones 
of Balkan states with German princes, putting German 
officers at the service of Turkey to drill her armies and 
make interest with her government, developing plans of 
sedition and rebellion in India and Egypt, setting their 
fires in Persia. The demands made by Austria upon 
Serbia were a mere single step in a plan which compassed 
Europe and Asia, from Berlin to Bagdad. They hoped 
those demands might not arouse Europe, but they meant 
to press them whether they did or not, for they thought 
themselves ready for the final issue of arms. 

Their plan was to throw a broad belt of German 
military power and political control across the very 
center of Europe and beyond the Mediterranean into the 
heart of Asia, and Austria-Hungary was to be as much 
their tool and pawn as Serbia or Bulgaria or Turkey or 
the ponderous states of the East. Austria-Hungary, in- 
deed, was to become part of the Central German Empire, 
absorbed and dominated by the same forces and influences 
that had originally cemented the German states them- 
selves. The dream had its heart at Berlin. It could 
have had a heart nowhere else. It rejected the idea of 



202 WOODROW WILSON 

solidarity of race entirely. The choice of peoples played 
no part in it at all. It contemplated binding together 
racial and political units which could be kept together 
only by force — Czechs, Magyars, Croats, Serbs, Ruman- 
ians, Turks, Armenians — the proud states of Bohemia 
and Hungary, the stout little commonwealths of the Bal- 
kans, the indomitable Turks, the subtle peoples of the 
East. These people did not wish to be united. They 
ardently desired to direct their own affairs, and would 
be satisfied only by undisputed independence. They could 
be kept quiet only by the presence or the constant threat 
of armed men. They would live under a common power 
only by sheer compulsion and await the day of revolution. 
But the German military statesmen had reckoned with all 
that and were ready to deal with it in their own way. 

And they have actually carried the greater part of that 
amazing plan into execution! Look how things stand. 
Austria is at their mercy. It has acted, not upon its own 
initiative or upon the choice of its own people, but at 
Berlin's dictation ever since the war began. Its people 
now desire peace, but cannot have it until leave is 
granted from Berlin. The so-called Central Powers are 
in fact but a single Power. Servia is at its mercy, should 
its hands be but for a moment freed. Bulgaria has con- 
sented to its will, and Roumania is overrun. The Turkish 
armies, which Germany trained, are serving Germany, 
certainly not themselves, and the guns of German war- 
ships 4 lying in the harbor at Constantinople remind 
Turkish statesmen every day that they have no choice but 
to take their orders from Berlin. From Hamburg to the 
Persian Gulf the net is spread. 

Is it not easy to understand the eagerness for peace that 
has been manifested from Berlin ever since the snare was 
set and sprung? Peace, peace, peace has been the talk of 
of her Foreign Office for now a year and more ; not peace 



THE FLAG DAY SPEECH 203 

upon her own intiative, but upon the initiative of the na- 
tions over which she now deems herself to hold the advan- 
tage. A little of the talk has been public, but most of it 
has been private. Through all sorts of channels it has 
come to me, and in all sorts of guises, but never with the 
terms disclosed which the German Government would be 
willing to accept. That government has other valuable 
pawns in its hands besides those I have mentioned. It 
still holds a valuable part of France, though with slowly 
relaxing grasp, and practically the whole of Belgium. Its 
armies press close upon Russia and overrun Poland at 
their will. It cannot go further; it dare not go back. It 
wishes to close its bargain before it is too late and it has 
little left to offer for the pound of flesh it will demand. 
The military masters under whom Germany is bleeding 
see very clearly to what point Fate has brought them. If 
they fall back or are forced back an inch, their power 
both abroad and at home will fall to pieces like a house 
of cards. It is their power at home they are thinking 
about now more than their power abroad. It is that 
power which is trembling under their very feet ; and deep 
fear has entered their hearts. They have but one chance 
to perpetuate their military power or even their con- 
trolling political influence. If they can secure peace now 
with the immense advantages still in their hands which 
they have up to this point apparently gained, they will 
have justified themselves before the German people: they 
will have gained by force w T hat they promised to gain by 
it: an immense expansion of German power, an immense 
enlargement of German industrial and commercial oppor- 
tunities. Their prestige will be secure, and with their 
prestige their political power. If they fail, their people 
will thrust them aside ; a government accountable to the 
people themselves will be set up in Germany as it has been 
in England, in the United States, in France, and in all the 



204 WOODROW WILSON 

great countries of the modern time except Germany. If 
they succeed they are safe and Germany and the world 
are undone; if they fail Germany is saved and the world 
will be at peace. If they succeed, America will fall within 
the menace. We and all the rest of the world must re- 
main armed, as they will remain, and must make ready for 
the next step in their aggression; if they fail, the world 
may unite for peace and Germany may be of the union. 

Do you not now understand the new intrigue, the in- 
trigue for peace, and why the masters of Germany do not 
hesitate to use any agency that promises to effect their pur- 
pose, the deceit of the nations? Their present particular 
aim is to deceive all those who throughout the world stand 
for the rights of peoples and the self-government of na- 
tions; for they see what immense strength the forces of 
justice and of liberalism are gathering out of this war. 
They are employing liberals in their enterprise. They are 
using men, in Germany and without, as their spokesmen 
whom they have hitherto despised and oppressed, using 
them for their own destruction, — socialists, the leaders 
of labor, the thinkers they have hitherto sought to silence. 
Let them once succeed and these men, now their tools, will 
be ground to powder beneath the weight of the great 
military empire they will have set up ; the revolutionists in 
Russia will be cut off from all succor or cooperation in 
western Europe and a counter revolution fostered and 
supported; Germany herself will lose her chance for 
freedom; and all Europe will arm for the next, the final 
struggle. 

The sinister intrigue is being no less actively conducted 
in this country than in Russia and in every country in 
Europe to which the agents and dupes of the Imperial 
German Government can get access. That government 
has many spokesmen here, in places high and low. They 
have learned discretion. They keep within the law. It is 



THE FLAG DAY SPEECH 205 

opinion they utter now, not sedition. They proclaim the 
liberal purposes of their masters; declare this a foreign 
war which can touch America with no danger to either 
her lands or her institutions; set England at the center of 
the stage and talk of her ambition to assert economic 
dominion throughout the world ; appeal to our ancient 
tradition of isolation 5 in the politics of the nations; and 
seek to undermine the government with false professions 
of loyalty to its principles. 

But they will make no headway. The false betray 
themselves always in every accent. It is only friends and 
partisans of the German Government whom we have al- 
ready identified who utter these thinly disguised dis- 
loyalties. The facts are patent to all the world, and no- 
where are they more plainly seen than in the United 
States, where we are accustomed to deal with facts and not 
with sophistries; and the great fact that stands out above 
all the rest is that this is a peoples' war, a war for free- 
dom and justice and self-government amongst all the 
nations of the world, a war to make the world safe for 
the peoples who live upon it and have made it their own, 
the German people themselves included ; and that with 
us rests the choice to break through all these hypocrisies 
and patent cheats and masks of brute force and help set 
the world free, or else stand aside and let it be dominated 
a long age through by sheer weight of arms and the arbi- 
trary choices of self-constituted masters, by the nation 
which can maintain the biggest armies and the most irre- 
sistible armaments, — a power to which the world has 
afforded no parallel and in the face of which political 
freedom must wither and perish. 

For us there is but one choice. We have made it. Woe 
be to the man or group of men that seeks to stand in our 
way in this day of high resolution when every principle we 
hold dearest is to be vindicated and made secure for the 



206 WOODROW WILSON 

salvation of the nations. We are ready to plead at the 
bar of history, and our flag shall wear a new luster. Once 
more we shall make good with our lives and fortunes the 
great faith to which we were born, and a new glory shall 
shine in the face of our people, 

Which is the more democratic, universal military service or 
volunteer service? 

What is your answer to President Wilson's question? Was 
it for some new purpose, or for some old familiar purpose, 
that our soldiers were sent across the sea in 1917? 

Is the President's account of German intrigue chiefly argu- 
mentative or persuasive? 

Discuss the danger of Germany's peace intrigue. What steps 
had been taken in America at this time to combat it? 

What did President Wilson mean when he said " our flag 
shall wear a new luster"? 



PRUSSIANIZED GERMANY 

September 26, 1917 

The declaration of war against Germany was passed 
by Congress with a vote of 461 to 56 ; and probably an 
even larger proportion of the citizens of the country 
was at that time in favor of resisting the Central Em- 
pires through force of arms. When the Selective 
Draft Law was enacted the people responded with 
remarkable good-will. Even in remote districts settled 
largely by citizens of foreign birth the burdens of mili- 
tary life were accepted with far less disturbance than 
had marked the enforcement of the draft in New 
York City in 1861. There was in 1917 no open re- 
sistance to the authority of the government; neverthe- 
less there remained throughout the country numerous 
individual agitators of noisy dispositions and pro- 
German sympathies ; and German propagandists were 
still able to arouse among pacifists, obstructionists, and 
some citizens of foreign birth, a babble of talk more 
or less seditious in its nature. Newspapers under 
German influence or control, abused their privilege of 
free speech ; and by conflicting advice as well as by 
direct opposition, endeavored to prevent the nation 
from taking the speedy, vigorous, and unified action 
that is essential to military success. 

The success of America's part in the war might have 
been seriously endangered had not the government 
and various organizations of patriotic citizens taken 
vigorous means to curb the action of spies and enemv 
agents and to impress upon pacifists the fact that it 

207 



208 PRUSSIANIZED GERMANY 

was no time to talk of the blessings of peace when the 
country was at war. Citizens of foreign birth were 
also informed that cosmopolitan views must make way 
for American ideals. 

When the United States first entered the Great War, 
much sympathy had been felt for the citizens of Ger- 
man birth whose friends and relatives were enrolled in 
the armies of the enemy. To a fault native citizens 
had been considerate of their feelings. As soon, how- 
ever, as seditious talk, fanned by German intrigue, 
flared up among the foreign born population, resent- 
ment was everywhere aroused. Opposition to disloyal 
agitation became intense throughout the country, and 
organized effort was used to bring sedition to an end. 

Not all German-Americans were pro-German in 
their sympathies. Certain Americans of German birth 
were conspicuous for their patriotic devotion to Amer- 
ican institutions and for their abhorrence of the aims 
of Prussian autocracy. If Germany had hoped that 
through the use of subsidized newspapers and clandes- 
tine associations, she could array the entire American 
citizenship of German descent on the side of the Fa- 
therland, she was defeated as completely as in any 
battle of the war. Among the first to shed their blood 
for America were citizens with German names. 

Among men of German birth who at this time ren- 
dered conspicuous service to the nation was Otto H. 
Kahn. It was partly through his influence that late 
in 1917 practically every form of disloyal utterance 
was discontinued or stamped out. He had faith that 
an argumentative and persuasive appeal addressed di- 
rectly to citizens of foreign birth who were speaking 
sedition or were adhering to their oath of allegiance 
with half-hearted loyalty would be effective both to 
seal their lips and to change their aims and sympathies, 



PRUSSIANIZED GERMANY 209 

On September 26, 1917, while the country was still 
aroused with efforts to end seditious agitation, Mr. 
Kahn delivered a patriotic address before the Chamber 
of Commerce in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, a city in- 
habited by people of German ancestry and situated in a 
region in which the German language was extensively 
spoken. His speech was remarkably effective. It 
spread far beyond the hall where it was spoken and 
brought to the hearts of naturalized American citizens 
a clearer understanding of the obligations involved in 
the oath of citizenship. It stirred millions of German- 
Americans and other hyphenated Americans to higher 
standards of loyalty and recorded in English of un- 
usual excellence a final disapproval of racial subdivi- 
sions in American citizenship. 



PRUSSIANIZED GERMANY 

Otto H. Kahx 

I speak as one who has seen the spirit of the Prussian 
governing class at work from close by, having at its 
disposal and using to the full practically every agency for 
molding the public mind. 

I have watched it proceed with relentless persistency 
and profound cunning to instill into the nation the 
demoniacal obsession of power-worship and world- 
dominion, to modify and pervert the mentality — indeed 
the very fibre and moral substance — of the German 
people, a people which until misled, corrupted and sys- 
tematically poisoned by the Prussian ruling caste, was and 
deserved to be, an honored, valued, and welcome member 
of the family of nations. 

I have hated that spirit ever since it came within my 



210 OTTO H. KAHN 

ken many years ago; hated it all the more as I saw it 
ruthlessly pulling down a thing which was dear to me — 
the old Germany to which I was linked by ties of blood, 
by fond memories, and cherished sentiments. 

The difference in the degree of guilt as between the 
German people and their Prussian or Prussianized rulers 
and leaders for the monstrous crime of this war and the 
atrocious barbarism of its conduct is the difference be- 
tween the man who, acting under the influence of a poison- 
ous drug, runs amuck in mad frenzy, and the unspeakable 
malefactor who administered that drug, well knowing 
and fully intending the ghastly consequences which were 
bound to follow. 

The world fervently longs for peace. But there can 
be no peace answering to the true meaning of the word — 
no peace permitting the nations of the earth, great and 
small, to walk unarmed and unafraid — until the teach- 
ing and the leadership of the apostles of an outlaw creed 
shall have become discredited and hateful in the sight 
of the German people; until that people shall have awak- 
ened to a consciousness of the unfathomable guilt of those 
whom they have followed into calamity and shame; until 
a mood of penitence and of a decent respect for the 
opinions of mankind shall have supplanted the sway of 
what President Wilson has so trenchantly termed " trucu- 
lence and treachery." 

God strengthen the conscience and the understanding, 
the will and the power of the German people so that they 
may find the only way which will give to the world an 
early peace, the only road x which in time will lead Ger- 
many back into the family of nations from which it is 
now an outcast. 

From each successive visit to Germany for twenty-five 
years I came away more appalled by the sinister transmu- 
tation Prussianism had wrought amongst the people and 



PRUSSIANIZED GERMANY 211 

by the portentous menace I recognized in it for the entire 
world. 

It has given to Germany unparalleled prosperity, bene- 
ficent and advanced social legislation, and not a few other 
things of value, but it had taken in payment the soul of 
the race. It had made a " devil's bargain." 

And when this war broke out in Europe I knew that 
the issue had been joined between the powers of brutal 
might and insensate ambition on the one side and the 
forces of humanity and liberty on the other; between 
darkness and light. 

Many there were at that time — and amongst them men 
for whose character I had high respect and whose mo- 
tives were beyond any possible suspicion — who saw their 
own and America's duty in strict neutrality, mentally 
and actually, but personally I believed from the begin- 
ning of the war, whether we liked all the elements of the 
Allies combination or not — and I certainly did not l'ke 
the Russia of the Czars — that the cause of the Allies was 
America's cause. 

I believed that this was no ordinary war between peo- 
ples for a question of national interest, or even national 
honor, but a conflict between fundamental principles, aims, 
and ideas ; and so believing I was bound to feel that the 
natural lines of race, blood and kinship could not be the 
determining lines for one's attitude and alignment, but 
that each man, regardless of his origin, had to decide ac- 
cording to his judgment and conscience on which side was 
the right and on which was the wrong and take his stand 
accordingly, whatever the wrench and anguish of the de- 
cision. And thus I took my stand three years ago. 

But whatever one's views and feelings, whatever the 
country of one's birth or kin, only one course 2 was left 
for all those claiming the privilige of American citizen- 
ship when after infinite forbearance the President decided 



212 OTTO H. KAHN 

that our duty, honor, and safety demanded that we take 
up arms against the Imperial German Government, and 
by action of Congress the cause and the fight against that 
Government were declared our cause and our fight. 

The duty of loyal allegiance and faithful service to his 
country, even unto death, rests, of course, upon every 
American. But, if it be possible to speak of a compara- 
tive degree concerning what is the highest as it is the 
most elementary attribute of citizenship, that duty may 
almost be said to rest with an even more solemn and 
compelling obligation upon Americans of foreign origin 
than upon native Americans. 

For we Americans of foreign antecedents are here not 
by the accidental right of birth, but by our own free 
choice for better or for worse. 

We are your fellow citizens because we made solemn 
oath of allegiance to America. Accepting that oath as 
given in good faith, you have opened to us in generous 
trust the portals of American opportunity and freedom, 
and have admitted us to membership in the family of 
Americans, giving us equal rights in the great inheritance 
which has been created by the blood and the toil of your 
ancestors, asking nothing from us in return but decent 
citizenship and adherence to those ideals and principles 
which are symbolized by the glorious flag of America. 

Woe to the foreign-born American who betrays the 
trust which you have reposed in him ! 

Woe to him who considers his American citizenship 
merely as a convenient garment to be worn in fair weather 
but to be exchanged for another one in time of storm and 
stress ! 

Woe to the German-American, so-called who, in this sa- 
cred war for a cause as high as any for which ever people 
took up arms, does not feel a solemn urge, does not show 
an eager determination to be in the very fore-front of the 



PRUSSIANIZED GERMANY 213 

Struggle; does not prove a patriot's jealousy, in thought, 
in action, and in speech to rival and to outdo his native- 
born fellow citizen in devotion and in willing sacrifice for 
the country of his choice and adoption and sworn al- 
legiance, and of their common affection and pride. 

As Washington led Americans of British blood to fight 
against Great Britain, as Lincoln called upon Americans 
of the North to fight their very brothers of the South, so 
Americans of German descent are now summoned to join 
in our country's righteous struggle against a people of their 
own blood, which, under the evil spell of a dreadful 
obsession, and, Heaven knows, through no fault of ours, 
has made itself the enemy of this peaceloving nation, as 
it is the enemy of peace and right and freedom through- 
out the world. 

To gain America's independence, to defeat oppression 
and tyranny, w r as indeed to gain a great cause. To pre- 
serve the Union, to eradicate slavery, was perhaps a 
greater still. To defend the very foundations of liberty 
and humanity, the very groundwork of fair dealing be- 
tween nations, the very basis of peaceable living together 
among the peoples of the earth against the fierce and 
brutal onslaught of ruthless, lawless, faithless might; to 
spend the lives and the fortunes of this generation so that 
our descendants may be freed from the dreadful calamity 
of war and the fear of war, so that the energies and bil- 
lions of treasure now devoted to plans and instruments 
of destruction may be given henceforth to fruitful works 
of peace and progress and to the betterment of the con- 
ditions of the people — that is the highest cause for which 
any people ever unsheathed its sword. 

He who shirks the full measure of his duty and alle- 
giance in that noblest of causes, be he German-American, 
Irish-American, or any other hyphenated American, be 
he I. W. W., or Socialist, or whatever the appellation, 



214 OTTO H. KAHN 

does not deserve to stand amongst Americans or, indeed, 
amongst free men anywhere. 

He who tries, secretly or overtly, to thwart the de- 
clared will and aim of the nation in this holy war is a 
traitor, and a traitor's fate should be his. 

Why was unity of sentiment and action of the greatest im- 
portance at the time this speech was delivered? 

What means does Kahn take at the beginning of his speech 
to secure the sympathetic attention of his audience? 

Contrast the growth of the American spirit with that of the 
Prussian military despotism. 

What seems to be Kahn's attitude toward the transplanting 
to America of European languages, customs, and modes of 
living? 

What means does Kahn take to induce German-Americans to 
oppose themselves against people of their own blood? 

Discuss the duties and privileges of an " American by 
choice." 

Why was this speech widely read and quoted? 



PRESIDENT WILSON'S MESSAGE TO 
CONGRESS 

December 4, 1917 

That America had pledged all her resources to the 
winning of the war was everywhere taken for granted 
in the fall of 1917. Discussion no longer occupied 
itself with that matter; but peace rumors and peace 
proposals were current, and there were people who 
inquired continually as to what might constitute a 
satisfactory conclusion for the struggle. Would we 
aid our Allies to satisfy their political aspirations at the 
expense of Germany? Did we wish to administer 
retributive punishment to the Central Empires? Was 
it not possible that Germany already w T as willing to 
grant all that the United States required? Such dis- 
cussion while our enemies were gaining ground in Italy 
and Russia helped to impair and obscure the lofty 
purpose for which America had entered the war. 

Throughout the country people looked forward 
hopefully to the Message which the Constitution re- 
quires the President to bring before Congress at the 
beginning of the December session. It was believed 
that President Wison would not favor peace obtained 
through compromise. It was thought that he would 
recommend as the best method of securing for the 
world a just and generous peace that the United 
States should declare war against Austria and there- 
after prosecute the struggle with the Central Empires 
vigorously until a conclusive victory was attained. 

215 



216 MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 

On December 4, 191 7, as many visitors as could 
secure tickets of admission crowded the galleries of 
the Hall of the Representatives in the Capitol at 
Washington. Many distinguished diplomats were 
present. Mrs. Wilson and a party of friends occu- 
pied the executive box. After a brief delay Vice- 
President Marshall entered leading the Senate who 
came from their chamber in a body. Chief Justice 
White was seated with five other justices of the Su- 
preme Court directly before the speaker's rostrum. At 
half-past twelve the President entered. The visitors 
remarked that he had never appeared to better advan- 
tage. Instead of his customary somber garments, he 
wore a cravat with a dash of color and a close-fitting 
morning coat that gave him an almost youthful trim- 
ness. 

The President spread upon the desk small type- 
written sheets of manuscript, and in clear distinct 
tones began to read his Message. His hearers listened 
eagerly and from time to time applauded as he ap- 
pealed to love of country or to the desire to win the 
war. But when he spoke of access to the seas, and 
meted out to Austria the same rights as to Servia and 
Poland, there came over the audience a sense of dis- 
appointment and gloom ; for most had been hoping that 
the day of reckoning with the spies and plotters of 
Austria was at hand: when, however, a moment later 
with dramatic suddenness he asked Congress to de- 
clare war upon Austria, cheers came from a dozen 
places at once and grew into a mighty shout, and the 
audience including even the Chief Justice rose and 
applauded. 

The President did not use this speech to disseminate 
any new or remarkable ideas, but in it he reaffirmed 
and made clear at a critical time the policy that was 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 217 

the basis of America's participation in the war. In 
this speech, as one has said, he nailed America's colors 
to the mast. 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS, DECEMBER 4, 1917 

Woodrow Wilson 

Gentlemen of the Congress: Eight months have 
elapsed since I last had the honor of addressing you. They 
have been months crowded with events of immense and 
grave significance for us. I shall not undertake to retail 
or even to summarize those events. The practical par- 
ticulars of the part we have played in them will be laid 
before you in the reports of the executive departments. I 
shall discuss only our present outlook upon these vast 
affairs, our present duties, and the immediate means of 
accomplishing the objects we shall hold always in view. 

I shall not go back to debate the causes of the war. The 
intolerable w r rongs done and planned against us by the 
sinister masters of Germany have long since become too 
grossly obvious and odious to every true American to need 
to be rehearsed. But I shall ask you to consider again 
and with a very grave scrutiny our objectives and the 
measures by which w r e mean to attain them ; for the pur- 
pose of discussion here in this place is action, and our 
action must move straight tow T ard definite ends. Our 
object is, of course, to win the w T ar; and we shall not 
slacken or suffer ourselves to be diverted until it is won. 
But it is worth w T hile asking and answering the question, 
When shall we consider the w r ar won? 

From one point of view it is not necessary to broach this 
fundamental matter. I do not doubt that the American 
people know what the war is about and what sort of an 



218 WOODROW WILSON 

outcome they will regard as a realization of their purpose 
in it. As a nation we are united in spirit and intention. 
I pay little heed to those who tell me otherwise. I hear 
the voices of dissent — who does not? I hear the criticism 
and the clamor of the noisily thoughtless and troublesome. 
I also see men here and there fling themselves in impotent 
disloyalty against the calm, indomitable power of the 
nation. I hear men debate peace 1 who understand neither 
its nature nor the way in which we may attain it with 
uplifted eyes and unbroken spirits. But I know that none 
of these speaks for the nation. They do not touch the 
heart of anything. They may safely be left to strut their 
uneasy hour and be forgotten. 2 

But from another point of view I believe that it is 
necessary to say plainly what we here at the seat of action 
consider the war to be for, and what part we mean to 
play in the settlement of its searching issues. We are the 
spokesmen of the American people and they have a right to 
know 3 whether their purpose is ours. They desire peace 
by the overcoming of evil, by the defeat once for all of 
the sinister forces that interrupt peace and render it im- 
possible, and they wish to know how closely our thought 
runs with theirs and what action we propose. They are 
impatient with those who desire peace by any sort of com- 
promise — deeply and indignantly impatient — but they 
will be equally impatient with us if we do not make it 
plain to them what our objectives are and what we are 
planning for in seeking to make conquest of peace by 
arms. 

I believe that I speak for them when I say two things: 
First, that this intolerable thing of which the masters of 
Germany have shown us the ugly face, this menace of 
combined intrigue and force which we now see so clearly 
as the German power, a thing without conscience or honor 
or capacity for covenanted peace, must be crushed, and if 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 219 

it be not utterly brought to an end, at least shut out from 
the friendly intercourse of the nations; and, second, that 
when tin's thing and its power are indeed defeated and 
the time comes that we can discuss peace — when the Ger- 
man people have spokesmen whose word we can helieve, 
and when those spokesmen are ready in the name of their 
people to accept the common judgment of the nations 
as to what shall henceforth be the bases of law and of 
covenant for the life of the w T orld — we shall be willing 
and glad to pay the full price for peace, and pay it un- 
grudgingly. We know w T hat that price will be. It will 
be full, impartial justice — justice done at every point and 
to every nation that the final settlement must affect, our 
enemies as well as our friends. 

You catch, with me, the voices of humanity that are 
in the air. They grow daily more audible, more articu- 
late, more persuasive, and they come from the hearts of 
men everywhere. They insist that the war shall not end 
in vindictive action of any kind ; that no nation or people 
shall be robbed or punished because the irresponsible 
rulers of a single country have themselves done deep and 
abominable wrong. It is this thought that has been ex- 
pressed in the formula " No annexations, no contributions, 
no punitive indemnities." Just because this crude formula 
expresses the instinctive judgment as to right of plain 
men everywhere, it has been made diligent use of by the 
masters of German intrigue to lead the people of Russia 
astray — and the people of every other country their agents 
could reach, in order that a premature peace might be 
brought about before autocracy has been taught its final 
and convincing lesson, and the people of the world pu* 
in control of their own destinies. 

But the fact that a wrong use has been made of a just 
idea is no reason why a right use should not be made of it. 
It ought to be brought under the patronage of its real 



220 WOODROW WILSON 

friends. Let it be said again that autocracy must first 
be shown the utter futility of its claims to power or leader- 
ship in the modern world. It is impossible to apply any 
standard of justice so long as such forces are unchecked 
and undefeated as the present masters of Germany com- 
mand. Not until that has been done can Right be set 
up as arbiter and peacemaker among the nations. But 
when that has been done — as, God willing, it assuredly 
will be — we shall at last be free to do an unprecedented 
thing, and this is the time to avow our purpose to do it. 
We shall be free to base peace on generosity and justice, 
to the exclusion of all selfish claims to advantage even on 
the part of the victors. 

Let there be no misunderstanding. Our present and 
immediate task is to win the war, and nothing shall turn 
us aside from it until it is accomplished. Every power 
and resource we possess, whether of men, of money, or 
materials, is being devoted and will continue to be de- 
voted to that purpose until it is achieved. Those who 
desire to bring peace about before that purpose is achieved 
I counsel to carry their advice elsewhere. We will not 
entertain it. We shall regard the war as won only when 
the German people say to us, through properly accredited 
representatives, that they are ready to agree to a settlement 
based upon justice and the reparation of the wrongs their 
rulers have done. They have done a wrong to Belgium 
which must be repaired. They have established a power 
over other lands and peoples than their own — over the 
great Empire of Austria-Hungary, over hitherto free Bal- 
kan states, over Turkey, and within Asia — which must be 
relinquished. 

Germany's success by skill, by industry, by knowledge, 
by enterprise we did not grudge or oppose, but admired, 
rather. She had built up for herself a real empire of 
trade and influence, secured by the peace of the world. 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 221 

We were content to abide the rivalries of manufacture, 
science, and commerce that were involved for us in her 
success, and stand or fall as we had or did not have the 
brains and the initiative to surpass her. But at the mo- 
ment when she had conspicuously won her triumphs of 
peace she threw them away to establish in their stead 
what the world will no longer permit to be established, 
military and political domination by arms by which to 
oust where she could not excel the rivals she most feared 
and hated. 

The peace we make must remedy that wrong. It must 
deliver the once fair lands and happy peoples of Belgium 
and northern France from the Prussian conquest and the 
Prussian menace, but it must also deliver the peoples of 
Austria-Hungary, the peoples of the Balkans, and the 
peoples of Turkey, alike in Europe and in Asia, from the 
impudent and alien dominion of the Prussian military and 
commercial autocracy. 

We owe it, however, to ourselves to say that we do not 
wish in any way to impair or to rearrange the Austro- 
Hungarian Empire. It is no affair of ours what they do 
with their own life, either industrially or politically. We 
do not purpose or desire to dictate to them in any way. 
We only desire to see that their affairs are left in their 
own hands, in all matters, great or small. We shall hope 
to secure for the people of the Balkan peninsula and for 
the peoples of the Turkish Empire the right and oppor- 
tunity to make their own lives safe, their own fortunes 
secure against oppression or injustice, and from the dicta- 
tion of foreign courts or parties. 

And our attitude and purpose with regard to Germany 
herself are of a like kind. We intend no wrong against 
the German Empire, no interference with her internal 
affairs. We should deem either the one or the other ab- 
solutely unjustifiable, absolutely contrary to the principles 



222 WOODROW WILSON 

we have professed to live by and to hold mGst sacreu 
throughout our life as a nation. 

The people of Germany are being told by the men 
whom they now permit to deceive them and to act as their 
masters, that they are fighting for the very life and exist- 
ence of their empire, a war of desperate self-defense 
against deliberate aggression. Nothing could be more 
grossly or wantonly false, and we must seek by the ut- 
most openness and candor as to our real aims to convince 
them of its falseness. We are in fact fighting for their 
emancipation from fear, along with our own — from the 
fear as well as from the fact of unjust attack by neighbors 
or rivals or schemers after world empire. No one is 
threatening the existence or the independence or the peace- 
ful enterprise of the German Empire. 

The worst that can happen to the detriment of the 
German people is this, that if they should still, after the 
war is over, continue to be obliged to live under ambitious 
and intriguing masters interested to disturb the peace of 
the world — men or classes of men whom the other peoples 
of the world could not trust — it might be impossible to 
admit them to the partnership of nations which must 
henceforth guarantee the world's peace. That partner- 
ship must be a partnership of peoples, not a mere partner- 
ship of governments. It might be impossible, also, in such 
untoward circumstances, to admit Germany to the free 
economic intercourse which must inevitably spring out of 
the other partnerships of a real peace. But there would 
be no aggression in that; and such a situation, inevitable 
because of distrust, would in the very nature of things 
sooner or later cure itself, by processes which would as- 
suredly set in. 

The wrongs, the very deep wrongs, committed in this 
war will have to be righted. That of course. But they 
can not and must not be righted by the commission of 



MESSAGE TO O >NGRESS 223 

similar wrongs against Germany ar.d her allies. The 
world will not permit the commission of similar wrongs 
means of reparation and settlement. Statesmen must 
by this time have learned that the opinion of the world is 
everywhere wide-awake and fully comprehends the issues 
involved. No representative of any self-governed nation 
will dare disregard it by attempting any such covenants 
of selfishness and compromise as were entered into at the 
Congress of Vienna. 4 The thought of the plain people 
here and everywhere throughout the world, the people 
who enjoy no privilege and have very simple and unso- 
phisticated standards of right and wrong, is the air all 
governments must henceforth breathe if they would live. 
s the full disclosing light of that thought that all poli- 
cies must be conceived and executed in this midday hour 
of the world's life. German rulers have been able to 
upset the peace of the world only because the German 
people were not suffered under their tutelage to share the 
comradeship of the other people of the world either in 
thought or in purpose. They were allowed to have no 
opinion of their own which might be set up as a rule of 
conduct for those who exercised authority over them. But 
the congress that concludes this war will feel the 
strength of the tides that run now in the hearts and con- 
sciences of free men everywhere. Its conclusions will run 
with those tides. 

U these things have been true from the very beginning 
of this stupendous war; and I can not help thinking that 
if they had been made plain at the very outset the sym- 
pathy and enthusiasm of the Russian people might have 
been once for all enlisted on the side of the Allies, suspi- 
cion and distrust swept away, and a real and lasting union 
of purpo-e effected. Had they believed these thin_ 
the very moment of their revolution and had they been 
confirmed in that belief since, the sad reverses which have 



224 WOODROW WILSON 

recently marked the progress of their affairs toward an 
ordered and stable government of free men might have 
been avoided. The Russian people have been poisoned by 
the very same falsehoods that have kept the German peo- 
ple in the dark, and the poison has been administered by 
the very same hands. The only possible antidote is the 
truth. It can not be uttered too plainly or too often. 

From every point of view, therefore, it has seemed to 
be my duty to speak these declarations of purpose, to add 
these specific interpretations to what I took the liberty 
of saying to the Senate in January. Our entrance into 
the war has not altered our attitude toward the settle- 
ment that must come when it is over. When I said in 
January that the nations of the world were entitled not 
only to free pathways upon the sea but also to assured 
and unmolested access to those pathways I was thinking, 
and I am thinking now, not of the smaller and weaker 
nations alone, which need our countenance and support, 
but also of the great and powerful nations, and of our 
present enemies as well as our present associates in the war. 
I was thinking, and I am thinking now, of Austria her- 
self, among the rest, as well as of Serbia and of Poland. 
Justice and equality of rights can be had only at a great 
price. We are seeking permanent, not temporary, foun- 
dations for the peace of the world and must seek them 
candidly and fearlessly. As always, the right will prove 
to be the expedient. 

What shall we do, then, to push this great war of free- 
dom and justice to its righteous conclusion? We must 
clear away with a thorough hand all impediments to suc- 
cess, and we must make every adjustment of law that will 
facilitate the full and free use of our whole capacity and 
force as a fighting unit. 

One very embarrassing obstacle that stands in our way 
is that we arie at war with Germany but not with her 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 225 

allies. I therefore very earnestly recommend that the 
Congress immediately declare the United States in a 
state of war with Austria-Hungary. 5 Does it seem 
strange to you that this should be the conclusion of the 
argument I have just addressed to you? It is not. It is, 
in fact, the inevitable logic of what I have said. Austria- 
Hungary is for the time being not her own mistress, but 
simply the vassal of the German government. We must 
face the facts as they are and act upon them without 
sentiment in this stern business. The government of 
Austria-Hungary is not acting upon its own initiative or 
in response to the wishes and feelings of its own people, 
but as the instrument of another nation. We must meet 
its force with our own and regard the Central Powers 
as but one. The war can be successfully conducted in no 
other way. The same logic would lead also to a declara- 
tion of war against Turkey and Bulgaria. They also 
are the tools of Germany. But they are mere tools and 
do not yet stand in the direct path of our necessary action. 
We shall go wherever the necessities of this war carry us, 
but it seems to me that we should go only where immediate 
and practical considerations lead us and not heed any 
others. 

If I have overlooked anything 6 that ought to be done 
for the more effective conduct of the war, your own 
counsels will supply the omission. What I am perfectly 
clear about is that in the present session of Congress our 
whole attention and energy should be concentrated on the 
vigorous, rapid, and successful prosecution of the great 
task of winning the war. 

We can do this with all the greater zeal and enthu- 
siasm because we know that for us this is a war of high 
principle, debased by no selfish ambition of conquest or 
spoliation; because we know, and all the world knows, 
that we have been forced into it to save the very institu- 



226 WOODROW WILSON 

tions we live under from corruption and destruction. The 
purposes of the Central Powers strike straight at the very 
heart of everything we believe in; their methods of war- 
fare outrage every principle of humanity and of knightly 
honor; their intrigue has corrupted the very thought and 
spirit of many of our people; their sinister and secret 
diplomacy has sought to take our very territory away from 
us and disrupt the Union of the States. Our safety would 
be at an end, our honor forever sullied and brought into 
contempt, were we to permit their triumph. They are 
striking at the very existence of liberty and democracy. 

It is because it is for us a war of high, disinterested 
purpose, in which all the free people of the world are 
banded together for the vindication of the right, a war 
for the preservation of our nation and of all that it has 
held dear of principle and of purpose, that we feel our- 
selves doubly constrained to propose for its outcome only 
that which is righteous and of irreproachable intention, 
for our foes as well as for our friends. 

The cause being just and holy, the settlement must be 
of like motive and quality. For this we can fight, but 
for nothing less noble or less worthy of our traditions. 
For this cause we have entered the war and for this cause 
will we battle until the last gun is fired ! 

I have spoken plainly because this seems to me the time 
when it is most necessary to speak plainly, in order that 
all the world may know that even in the heat and ardor 
of the struggle and when our whole thought is of carry- 
ing the w T ar through to its end we have not forgotten any 
ideal or principle for which the name of America has been 
held in honor among the nations and for which it has been 
our glory to contend in the great generations that went 
before us. A supreme moment of history has come. The 
eyes of the people have been opened and they see. The 
hand of God is laid upon the nations. He will show 



MESSAGE TO CONGRESS 227 

them favor, I devoutly believe, only if they rise to the 
clear heights of His own justice and mercy. 

Point out the changes in American spirit that enabled Presi- 
dent Wilson to omit any reference to the causes of the war or 
to the necessity for it. 

Why was there need at the time this speech was delivered 
that President Wilson should reaffirm and make clear America's 
policy? 

The most insidious form of opposition encountered by 
America in carrying on the war was peace propaganda. Ex- 
plain this statement in detail. 

What is the significance of President Wilson's wish to avoid 
interference with the internal affairs of Germany and her asso- 
ciates? 

What advance toward democracy did President Wilson in 
this speech associate with racial aspirations? 

Is it undemocratic for diverse races to unite in one nation? 
Which of the peace terms suggested by President Wilson in 
this speech were finally embodied in the treaty of peace? 

Did President Wilson maintain that retaliation is contrary 
to the spirit of American democracy? 

Dicuss generosity and justice as the two fundamental prin- 
ciples of peace. Had these been the basis of previous treaties 
of peace? 

How do you think the world's progress toward democracy 
would have been affected if America in the fall of 1917 had 
compromised with Germany? 



PRESIDENT WILSON'S ADDRESS AT 
BALTIMORE 

April 6, 191 8 

In the spring of 1918 the forces of the Central Em- 
pires were apparently more successful than at any 
other time during the war. Hundreds of square miles 
of Italian territory were held by the Austrians and 
through the shameful treaty of Brest-Litovsk Russia 
had become the slave or vassal of Germany. The 
effect in America of this success on the part of our 
enemies was increased activity rather than discourage- 
ment. 

It had required nearly three years of observation, 
study, and thought before America could be aroused 
from its dream of peace and induced to take part in 
the war. It took a year of participation in the war 
before activity really became an adequate measure of 
our resources. But no illusion regarding Prussian 
aims could be cherished subsequent to the publication 
of the terms of the Russian treaties. America had 
cherished the ideal of liberty through enlightenment 
even before the War for Independence and had 
throughout her career been incomparably peace-loving. 
But Prussian autocracy had forced her in a few brief 
years to organize herself into a great war-machine 
fitted to answer the Hun with the only arguments that 
he could understand. With vacillation and debate left 
behind, and with a unity of purpose and sentiment that 
was awe-inspiring, this great nation in April, 1918, 

228 



ADDRESS AT BALTIMORE 229 

devoted all its resources almost to the last man and 
the last dollar to the war for liherty. 

Two war loans had already hecn floated with re- 
markahle success. Puhlic opinion had demanded that 
every penny must be saved for the fight. Personal 
extravagance was a disgrace. The curtailment of dis- 
play, the wearing of old clothes, extreme economy in 
food, were universal. When the Third Liberty Loan 
was announced. President Wilson was asked to take 
part in the opening of the campaign. On April 6. 
19 18, at Batimore, he reviewed twelve thousand 
troops from Camp Meade and a little later at the Fifth 
Regiment Armory was introduced by Ex-Governor 
Goldsborough to an audience of fifteen thousand per- 
sons to whom he addressed the speech which follows. 
In clearness, in directness, in general rhetorical excel- 
lence, it is unsurpassed by any other address called 
forth by the war. 



ADDRESS AT BALTIMORE 

Woodrow Wilson 

Fellow-citizexs : This is the anniversary * of our 
acceptance of Germany's challenge to fight for our right 
to live and be free, and for the sacred rights of freemen 
everywhere. The nation is awake. 2 There is no need 
to call to it. We know what the war must cost, our 
utmost sacrifice, the lives of our fittest men, and, if need 
be, all that we possess. 

The loan we are met to discuss is one of the least parts 
of what we are called upon to give and to do, though in 
itself imperative. The people of the whole country are 
alive to the necessity of it, and are ready to lend to the 



230 WOODROW WILSON 

utmost, 3 even where it involves a sharp skimping and 
daily sacrifice to lend out of meagre earnings. They will 
look with reprobation and contempt upon those who can 
and will not, upon those who demand a higher rate of 
interest, upon those who think of it as a mere commercial 
transaction. I have not come, therefore, to urge the loan. 
I have come only to give you, if I can, a more vivid con- 
ception of what it is for. 

The reasons for this great w T ar, the reason why it had 
to come, the need to fight it through, and the issues that 
hang upon its outcome, are more clearly disclosed now 
than ever before. It is easy to see just what this particu- 
lar loan means, because the cause we are fighting for 
stands more sharply revealed than at any previous crisis 
of the momentous struggle. The man who knows least 4 
can now see plainly how the cause of justice stands, and 
what the imperishable thing he is asked to invest in. Men 
in America may be more sure than they ever were before 
that the cause is their own, and that, if it should be lost, 
their own great nation's place and mission in the world 
would be lost with it. 

I call you to witness, my fellow-countrymen, that at 
no stage of this terrible business have I judged the pur- 
poses of Germany intemperately. I should be ashamed 
in the presence of affairs so grave, so fraught with the 
destinies of mankind throughout all the world, to speak 
with truculence, to use the weak language of hatred or 
vindictive purpose. We must judge as we would be 
judged. I have sought to learn the objects Germany has 
in this war from the mouths of her own spokesmen, and 
to deal as frankly with them as I wished them to deal 
with me. I have laid bare our own ideals, our own pur- 
poses, without reserve or doubtful phrase, and have asked 
them to say as plainly what it is that they seek. 

We have ourselves proposed no injustice, no aggres- 



ADDRESS AT BALTIMORE 231 

sion. We arc ready, whenever the final reckoning is 
made, to he just to the German people, deal fairly with 
the German power, as with all others. There can he no 
difference between peoples in the final judgment, if it is 
indeed to be a righteous judgment. To propose anything 
but justice, even-handed and dispassionate justice, to Ger- 
many at any time, whatever the outcome of the war, 
would be to renounce and dishonor our own cause, for 
we ask nothing that we are not willing to accord 

It has been with this thought that I have sought to 
learn from those who spoke for Germany whether it was 
justice or dominion and the execution of their own will 
upon the other nations of the world that the German 
leaders were seeking. They have answered — answered in 
unmistakable terms. They have avowed that it was not 
justice, but dominion and the unhindered execution of 
their own will. The avow r al has not come from Ger- 
many's statesmen. It has come from her military leaders, 
who are her real rulers. Her statesmen have said that 
they wished peace, and were ready to discuss its terms 
whenever their opponents were willing to sit down at the 
conference table w T ith them. Her present Chancellor has 
said — in indefinite and uncertain terms, indeed, and in 
phrases that often seem to deny their own meaning, but 
with as much plainness as he thought prudent — that he 
believed that peace should be based upon the principles 
which we had declared would be our own in the final 
settlement. 

At Brest-Litovsk her civilian delegates spoke in similar 
terms; professed their desire to conclude a fair peace and 
accord to the peoples with whose fortunes they were deal- 
ing the right to choose their own allegiances. But action 
accompanied and followed profession. Their military 
masters, the men who act for Germany and exhibit her 
purpose in execution, proclaimed a very different conclu- 



232 WOODROW WILSON 

sion. We can not mistake what they have done — in Rus- 
sia, in Finland, in the Ukraine, in Rumania. The real 
test of their justice and fair play has come. From this we 
may judge the rest. 

They are enjoying in Russia 5 a cheap triumph in which 
no brave or gallant nation can long take pride. A great 
people, helpless by their own act, lies for the time at their 
mercy. Their fair professions are forgotten. They no- 
where set up justice, but everywhere impose their power 
and exploit everything for their own use and aggrandize- 
ment, and the peoples of conquered provinces are invited 
to be free under their dominion! 

Are we not justified in believing that they would do 
the same things at their western front if they were not 
there face to face with armies whom even their countless 
divisions cannot overcome? If, when they have felt their 
check to be final, they should propose favorable and equit- 
able terms with regard to Belgium and France and Italy, 
could they blame us if we concluded that they did so only 
to assure themselves of a free hand in Russia and the 
East? 

Their purpose is, undoubtedly, to make all the Slavic 
peoples, all the free and ambitious nations of the Baltic 
Peninsula, all the lands that Turkey has dominated and 
misruled, subject to their will and ambition, and build 
upon that dominion an empire of force upon which they 
fancy that they can then erect an empire of gain and com- 
mercial supremacy — an empire as hostile to the Americas 
as to the Europe which it will overawe — an empire which 
will ultimately master Persia, India, and the peoples of 
the Far East. 

In such a program our ideals, the ideals of justice and 
humanity and liberty, the principle of the free self- 
determination of nations, upon which all the modern 
world insists, can play no part. They are rejected far 



ADDRESS AT BALTIMORE 233 

the ideals of power, for the principle that the strong must 
rule the weak, that trade must follow the flag, whether 
those to whom it is taken welcome it or not, that the 
peoples of the world are to he made suhject to the patron- 
age and overlordship of those who have the power to 
enforce it. 

That program once carried out, America and all who 
care or dare to stand with her must arm and prepare 
themselves to contest the mastery of the world — a mastery 
in which the rights of common men, the rights of women 
and of all who are weak, must for the time being be 
trodden under foot and disregarded and the old, age- 
long struggle for freedom and right begin again at its 
beginning. Everything that America has lived for and 
loved and grown great to vindicate and bring to a glo- 
rious realization will have fallen in utter ruin and the 
gates of mercy once more pitilessly shut upon mankind ! 

The thing is preposterous and impossible; and yet is 
not that what the w^hole course and action of the German 
armies has meant wherever" they have moved ? I do not 
wish, even in this moment of utter disillusionment, to 
judge harshly or unrighteously. I judge only what the 
German arms have accomplished with unpitying thorough- 
ness throughout every fair region they have touched. 

What, then, are we to do? For myself, I am ready, 
ready still, ready even now, to discuss a fair and just and 
honest peace at any time that it is sincerely purposed — a 
peace in which the strong and the w r eak shall fare alike. 
But the answer, when I proposed such a peace, came from 
the German commanders in Russia and I cannot mistake 
the meaning of the answer. 

I accept the challenge. I know that you accept it. All 
the w r orld shall know that you accept it. It shall appear 
in the utter sacrifice and self-forgetfulness with which we 
shall give all that we love and all that we have to redeem 



234 WOODROW WILSON 

the world and make it fit for free men like ourselves to 
live in. This now is the meaning of all that we do. Let 
everything that we say, my fellow-countrymen, every- 
thing that we henceforth plan and accomplish, ring true 
to this response till the majesty and might of our con- 
certed power shall fill the thought and utterly defeat the 
force of those who flout and misprize what we honor and 
hold dear. 

Germany has once more said that force, and force alone, 
shall decide whether justice and peace shall reign in the 
affairs of men, whether right as America conceives it or 
dominion as she conceives it shall determine the destinies 
of mankind. There is, therefore, but one response possible 
from us: Force, force to the utmost, 6 force without stint 
or limit, the righteous and triumphant force which shall 
make right the law of the world and cast every selfish 
dominion down in the dust. 

How were the Liberty Loans used ? 

What was the authority, force, or power that organized 
America and gave it the determination and the unity of action 
that we see reflected in President Wilson's Baltimore address? 

How did American women help to win the war? 

What characteristics of President Wilson's style in this speech 
imply a sympathetic and responsive audience? 

What effect do you suppose was produced in Germany by 
this address? 

Would it have been better if previous to 1914 the United 
States had maintained in accordance with President Roosevelt's 
advice a greatly enlarged army and navy? 

In what respects was democracy in America advanced during 
the Great War? 



THE allied armies of liberty and democracy under 
Marshal Foch applied the remedy of force, force to 
the utmost, with the result that the year 1918 saw the 
collapse of militarism and autocracy. On September 
30 Bulgaria surrendered. A month later Turkey gave 
in to the Allies, and on November 4 Austria-Hungary 
joined the ranks of the defeated. Deserted by their 
fellow-conspirators, defeated at the front, and dis- 
turbed by social uprisings within, Germany too realized 
that democracy will prevail. On November 9, the 
Kaiser was forced to abdicate after a reign of thirty 
years and to renounce the Imperial throne for his sons. 
Two days later, the eleventh of November, 1918, the 
Allies granted Germany an armistice, the terms of 
which were equivalent to complete and unconditional 
surrender. 

As we scan the pages of history we trace in the 
words of the great thinkers and speakers the evolu- 
tion of the principles of liberty and democracy that 
have helped to make the world equitable and safe for 
us. We read the words of Burke, of Lincoln, and of 
Wilson, and realize how great men in days that are 
gone met the crises that confronted them and won the 
priceless heritage that is ours. But the fight for lib- 
erty and democracy was not finished by the great 
statesmen who have gone before us, nor was it ended 
with the Great War, nor will it terminate with the 
making of a League of Nations. It can never end 
while there is a human race. As long as there are 
hearts to beat and souls to aspire, men will seek to 
brighten the flame of liberty. 

235 



236 LANDMARKS OF LIBERTY 

If we may judge the future by t.he past, Americans 
can look forward with confidence to an ever-brighten- 
ing day. As President McKinley once said: 

" Thus far we have done our supreme duty. Shall 
we now, when the victory won in war is to be written 
in the treaty of peace and the civilized world applauds 
and awaits in expectation, turn timidly away from the 
duties imposed upon the country by its own great 
deeds? And when the mists fade and we see with 
clearer vision, may we not go forth rejoicing in a 
strength which has been employed solely for humanity 
and always been tempered with justice and mercy, 
confident of our ability to meet the exigencies that 
await, because confident that our course is one of duty 
and our cause that of right?" 



LIVES AND NOTES 

JAMES OTIS 

James Otis was born in Barnstable, Massachusetts, February 
5, 1725. In 1743 he was graduated from Harvard. He soon 
became a distinguished lawyer. In February, 1761, as a result 
of his famous speech on the Writs of Assistance, he was elected 
to the Colonial Assembly. In 1765 he was a delegate for 
Massachusetts to the Colonial Congress. Four years later his 
active life was ended by a ruffianly attack received in a 
darkened room in a coffee house from a number of men whose 
anger he had stirred through a controversy in the newspapers. 
He never recovered from the effects of this brutal assault and 
was thereafter subject to recurring periods of insanity. On 
May 23, 1783, he was killed by a stroke of lightning. 



Writs of Assistance 

The text is taken from William Tudor's Life of James Otis, 
Boston, 1823. 

1 The whole range of argument. The speech as originally 
delivered was a learned and exhaustive legal argument that 
occupied four or five hours. The brief section given here was 
recorded by John Adams, who was present, and is all that 
remains. 

2 I engaged in it from principle. Note the persuasive influ- 
ence of his manly and conscientious attitude. 

:; One king his head. Charles I had been executed after trial 
by the Rump Parliament in 1649. As a result of the " Peaceful 
Revolution of 1688 " James II had been forced to flee, and 
William of Orange was invited to become king. 

4 Curse of Canaan. See Genesis 9:25. The curse was visited 
upon Canaan by Noah because of Canaan's father's sin. 

r> 14/// Charles II refers to a law made in the fourteenth year 
of the reign of Charles II. 

6 Tumult and blood. Is the last part of Otis's speech an 
exaggeration? 

237 



238 LIVES AND NOTES 



WILLIAM PITT, EARL OF CHATHAM 

William Pitt, Earl of Chatham, was born at Westminster 
in 1708. He was educated at Eton, and at Trinity College, 
Oxford. At both schools he gave much attention to rhetoric 
and elocution. On account of ill health he was not graduated 
from Oxford, but after leaving the university continued his 
studies. His favorite pastime was to translate and read aloud 
the works of Demosthenes, his model. In addition to this, he 
studied the sermons of Dr. Barrow, and memorized Bailey r s 
Dictionary. With this preparation in rhetoric he coupled ardu- 
ous study of voice and gesture. To a tall, imposing — almost 
princely — bearing, Chatham added every kind of power known 
to orators. Ridicule and taunt vied with pathos and exultation 
as he moved his hearers to enthusiasm. His language at all 
times was simple and free from figures of speech. He followed 
intuition rather than reason. His speeches naturally were not 
set pieces, for he depended on the occasion for his choice of 
words. 

To this unusual ability in rhetoric and a magnetic personal 
bearing, Chatham added unquestionable sincerity and a deep 
sense of national honor and dignity. His passion for liberty 
made him the friend of the American people. " I rejoice," he 
said, " that America has resisted. Three millions of people so 
dead to all the feelings of liberty as voluntarily to let them- 
selves be made slaves would have been fit instruments to make 
slaves of all the rest. If I were an American, as I am an 
Englishman, while a foreign troop was landed in my country, 
I never would lay down my arms — never — never — never! " 

While Chatham was in power, Walpole and the other min- 
isters were forced to take second place. The jealousy of his 
opponents and the autocracy of his manner, nevertheless, did 
not diminish his popularity. When he died, May 11, 1778, 
liberty and democracy lost one of their staunchest advocates. 

American Taxation 

The text is slightly abridged from The World's Famous Ora- 
tions, vol. Ill, p. 197, New York, 1906. 

1 / could have endured to be carried. In what ways does 
the use of this expression help Chatham to get a hearing? 

2 His majesty recommends. Compare this reference to the 
King with that of Otis. 



LIVES AND NOTES 239 

I he importance of the subject. Burke said of the American 
question, " Surely it is an awful subject or there is none this 
lide the grave." The vision of these two statesmen is as 
remarkable as the shortsightedness of the King and most of 
his ministers. I lad America been granted full participation in 
the English Constitution and even representation in Parliament, 
England, through the precedent, would have become the center 
of a great world empire; there would have been no Irish ques- 
tion, and instead of being joined as now by an uncertain and 
intangible bond, the British colonies would have become organic 
members of a vast but unified nation. 

4 The distinction between legislation and taxation. This was 
the British view and was maintained also by Burke. The 
Americans, however, prior to the declaration of independence 
had denied the distinction and had passed from " No taxation 
without representation" to "No legislation without representa- 
tion." 

" Virtual representation should be recognized as a step toward 
democracy. It at least acknowledged the right of representa- 
tion. 

G I am no courtier of America. Chatham's career as states- 
man illustrates the ultimate correctness and worth of a policy 
based on justice and right. 

7 The whole house of Bourbon. Kings descended from the 
Bourbon family ruled at this time in France, Spain, and Naples. 

JOHN WILKES 

John Wilkes was born in London in 1727. He came from a 
wealthy family and received a good education at the University 
of Leyden. He was elected to Parliament in 1757. In 1762, 
when Lord Bute forced Pitt from office, Wilkes published The 
North Briton in order to aid Pitt. No. 45 of this paper in 
which he maligned the government was adjudged a seditious 
libel and Wilkes was sent to jail. On appeal to the courts, 
however, he was awarded $20,000 damages for illegal im- 
prisonment. In 1769 he was elected four times in succession 
to sit in Parliament for Middlesex, but the House of Commons 
each time refused to accept him and seated his opponent who 
had received fewer votes. He became a popular hero and 
would have gained the support of the entire country but for his 
bad personal character. In 1-74 he was elected Lord Mayor 
of London. He represented Middlesex in Parliament from 



2 4 o LIVES AND NOTES 

1774 to 1790 and became the champion of the right of free 
representation by British constituencies. He died in 1797. 

War with America 

For the complete text see Speeches of Mr. Wilkes in the 
House of Commons, Third ed., p. 7. Preface dated London, 
December 9, 1786. 

1 Some very powerful cause. This statement finds a point 
of agreement with the audience and arouses their interest in 
what is to come. 

2 Carry to the foot of the throne. The House of Commons, 
assembled as a committee of the whole, was considering an 
address to the King upon the disturbances in America. The 
language and spirit of the resolution was such that it virtually 
proposed a policy of war. 

3 / well know what will follow. Only those who are familiar 
with the state of public opinion in the colonies in February, 
1775, can appreciate how remarkable is this prophecy and its 
fulfillment. The Americans at this time sought merely to use 
whatever means were necessary to secure their rights as English- 
men under the English Constitution. Although, no doubt, there 
were in America as in every country discontented individuals 
who sought revolution as the remedy for all political evils, 
there was when Wilkes spoke no general demand in the colonies 
for independence. John Jay said that previous to the rejection 
of the second petition of Congress in 1775 he ' never heard an 
American of any class or any description express a wish for the 
independence of the colonies.' 

Even after the battles of Lexington and Bunker Hill in the 
Dickinson declaration, published by George Washington when 
he took command of the American troops, it is said, " We most 
solemnly, before God and the world, declare, that, exerting 
the utmost energy of those powers which our beneficent Creator 
has graciously bestowed upon us, the arms which we have been 
compelled by our enemies to assume, we will, in defiance of 
every hazard, with unabating firmness and perseverence employ 
for the preservation of our liberties; being with one mind 
resolved to die freemen than to live slaves. 

" Lest this declaration should disquiet the minds of our friends 
and fellow-subjects in any part of the empire, we assure them 
that we mean not to dissolve that union which has so long and 
so happily subsisted between us, and which we sincerely wish 



LIVES AND NOTES 241 

to see restored. Necessity has not yet driven us into that des- 
perate measure, or induced us to incite any other nation to war 
against them. We have not raised armies with ambitious 
designs of separating from Great Britain, and establishing 
independent states." 

The demand for independence that was prevalent throughout 
the colonies a few months later was the outgrowth of military 
necessity. After Arnold's disastrous expedition into Canada it 
seemed impossible that the poorly organized American troops 
could cope with the armies of Great Britain without foreign 
help. Although the great body of Englishmen sympathized 
with the colonists in their struggle for liberty, Parliament and 
the King seemed bent on destroying America. The government 
finding it difficult to induce Britons to fight their kin across the 
sea, hired seventeen thousand Hessians to prosecute the war. 
The use of mercenary soldiers, of whom an indefinite number 
could be secured, convinced the colonists that they never could 
succeed in arms except through an alliance with foreign 
powers, which necessitated separation from the empire. The 
eyes of the American patriots, therefore, turned in 1776 more or 
less reluctantly to France, and Silas Deane was sent as am- 
bassador to Paris. 

On June 7 1776, Richard Lee of Virginia introduced into 
the Continental Congress the following resolution: 

" Resolved, that these United Colonies are, and of right ought 
to be, free and independent states; that they are absolved from 
all allegiance to the British crown; and that all political con- 
nection between them and the state of Great Britain is, and 
of right ought to be, totally dissolved." On July 4, 1776, the 
resolution was incorporated in the Declaration of Independence 
and was passed. 

Wilkes, on February 6, 1775, was led to make his remarkable 
prophecy, not through any rumor that the colonists would seek 
independence, but merely through his knowledge of the temper 
of the King and his ministers, and his belief in the determina- 
tion and earnestness of the American people, and his faith in 
the ultimate triumph of the principles of universal liberty that 
were involved. 

4 The blue riband. Lord North, the prime minister, was a 
Knight of the Garter. The badge of the order was a blue 
ribbon. 



2 4 a LIVES AND NOTES 



EDMUND BURKE 

Edmund Burke was born in Ireland, January 12, 1729. In 
1748 he was graduated from Trinity College, Dublin, and two 
years later took up the study of law at the Temple, London. 
For six years little was heard of him, and then he published a 
Vindication of Natural Society, and a Philosophical Inquiry into 
the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and the Beautiful. As 
a result of the fame these essays brought him he became a 
member of Johnson's famous literary club. He was also en- 
gaged to prepare a survey of important events for the Annual 
Register. For thirty years he edited this annual chronicle, and 
it is largely through the information thus gained that he was 
able to speak authoritatively in Parliament. 

In 1761, he became assistant-secretary to the lord lieutenant 
of Ireland. Rather than become a political vassal, he resigned 
in 1765, but his generally recognized ability soon won him an 
appointment with Lord Rockingham, the prime minister. In 
1766 he was elected to Parliament for the pocket-borough of 
Wendover. In 1774 in recognition of his speech on American 
Taxation he was elected to represent Bristol, a city second 
in importance in Enrland. It was immediately after this elec- 
tion which greatly added to his prestige, that he delivered his 
masterpiece on Conciliation with America. With his death in 
1797, his long fight for just and honest government came to a 
close. 



Conciliation with America 

The text is somewhat abridged from The Works of Edmund 
Burke, London, 1801, vol. Ill, p. 25. It is believed by the edi- 
tors that no matter essential to a proper understanding of 
Burke's general theory of government has been omitted ; and on 
the other hand it is hoped that exclusion of considerable detail 
used by Burke principally for the sake of corroboration will 
cause students to read with greater pleasure the more inspiring 
portions of the speech which are here retained. 

1 Juridical determination. This refers to the resolution of 
Lord North which was passed February 20, 1775, in which it 
was provided that as long as any colony contributed enough 
money voluntarily to support the civil government in that colony, 
and maintain adequate defense, the government of Great Britian 



LIVES AND NOTES 243 

would not impose any additional assessment " except such duties 
as it may be expedient to continue to levy or impose, for the 
regulation of commerce, the net produce of the duties last men- 
tioned to be carried to the account of such province or colony 
respectively." This project of Lord North's, Burke called an 
' auction of finance ' since each colony through the size of its 
appropriation was to bid for privileges. That it did not pro- 
vide for a free grant from the colonies is evident: for the share 
that any colony should be required to furnish for defense was 
determined by the authorities in England; most of the former 
obnoxious taxes could be retained under the provision for regu- 
lating commerce; and, finally, if the assemblies failed to give, 
the revenue would be exacted. 

2 Colony agents. As the colonies lacked the privilege of 
direct representation in Parliament, they often sent agents to 
watch legislation and try to influence it. The fact that they had 
to stay in the lobby, gave rise to the word lobbyist. 

3 Bills of pains and penalties. Such were the Boston Port 
bill and the Grand Penal bill. 

4 The object was America as a commercial ally of Britain. 

5 Roman charity. He refers to the Roman story of Cymon, 
who condemned to death by starvation, was kept alive by his 
daughter, Xanthippe, who visited him in prison and nourished 
him with milk from her breasts. 

6 Seemed even to excite your envy. Lord North's Grand Penal 
bill attempted to put a stop to the New England fisheries. 

7 Frozen serpent. Hydrus, a small constellation within the 
Antarctic Circle. 

8 To change that spirit. Note the argument by elimination. 
Burke prefers to have the third choice accepted because the 
other two were unsuitable rather than force validity by specific 
argument. 

9 Giving up the colonies. Dean Tucker of Gloucester advo- 
cated the giving up of the colonies in 1774, maintaining that 
England could get the entire trade of America by merely offer- 
ing the best market. 

10 Spoliatis arma supersunt: Juvenal, Satires VIII, 124. 
u Those who have been despoiled, may resort to arms." (They 
may rebel.) 

11 The ocean remains. This suggests a very real and effective 
argument. When it required months to cross the sea, the bonds 
between America and the Mother Country were necessarily 
weak. The lack of speedy and adequate communication with 



244 LIVES AND NOTES 

England was undoubtedly one of the most important causes of 
the demand for independence. 

Among neighbors an understanding is necessary even though 
we ignore people far away with whom we have no dealing. One 
of the chief incentives to the growth of Federal authority in 
America has been improvement in transportation and communi- 
cation. In like manner modern development in these arts 
make it impossible for America longer to ignore her interna- 
tional obligations. 

12 Sir Edward Coke. An erudite but heartless magistrate 
who in 1603 at the trial of Sir Walter Raleigh for treason 
assailed the prisoner in spiteful language calling him " viperous 
traitor," " spider of hell," and then calmly asked him, " Have 
I angered you ? " 

13 A necessary evil. Is not this argumentative rather than 
persuasive ? Could not Burke have based his argument on 
something more agreeable to the temper of Englishmen than 
the blunt statement that they had no choice? 

14 The colonies will go further. Burke's opponents feared 
that if the revenue laws were repealed, it would be the first 
step toward self-government and the permanent loss of the 
colonies. Burke later refutes this. 

15 Philip the Second: son of Charles V. He was king of 
Spain from 1556 to 1598. He married Mary, daughter of Henry 
VIII and is best known for his famous fleet, the Spanish 
Armada, with which he unsuccessfully tried to wrest the English 
throne from Elizabeth. 

16 The genius of the English Constitution. The English Con- 
stitution is not a single, written document containing the funda- 
mental principles of government as does the Constitution of the 
United States. It is rather made up of historical traditions, and 
important acts, such as the Magna Charta, the Bill cf Rights, 
and other charters. It is by no means indefinite or vaguely 
defined. Burke refers to it with perfect confidence, finding in its 
treatment of Ireland, Chester, Wales, and Durham, satisfactory 
precedents for a different treatment of the American colonies 
than that advocated by Lord North and his followers. 

17 Opposuit natura: nature opposes it. 

18 Republic of PlatOj etc.: well-kn^wn accounts of ideal com- 
monwealths. 

19 The year 1763: the year in which Grenville came into 
power. Before this a policy of ' salutary neglect ' had been 
pursued, but was then discarded for a new policy of exaction. 



I.IVES AND NOTES 245 

20 By grant and not by imposition. The colonial assemblies 
were to vote money to the King as a voluntary gift, and were not 
to be subjected to taxes, such as the Stamp Act, imposed by 
Parliament without their being consulted. This involved the 
repeal of the Declaratory Act. 

21 Posita luditur area. The money chest is given as a stake. 

22 Sursum corda! . Lift up your hearts! is the exhortation 
with which in the service of the church the priest proceeds to 
consecrate the elements. 

23 Quod felix faustumque sit. May it be happy and fortunate. 
It is the Roman invocation on beginning or concluding a solemn 
act. 

PATRICK HENRY 

Patrick Henry was born in Hanover County, Virginia, in 
1736. With James Otis he shares the distinction of being the 
first to advocate resistance by force of arms as the only remedy 
for the evils existing in the relations between England and 
America. Under his leadership, Virginia was the first state to 
oppose the Stamp Act. He introduced into the House of Bur- 
gesses a resolution denying that Parliament had the right to 
tax the American colonies. He realized that the trouble was 
caused by the ministers of George III, and in the frequently 
quoted passage boldly asserted " Caesar had his Brutus, Charles 

I had his Cromwell, and George III ". Here pausing until 

the cry of 'Treason!' from several parts of the house had 
ended, he deliberately added " may profit by their example. If 
this be treason, make the most of it." Henry was twice elected 
governor of Virginia, and his influence was very important in 
the formation of the Constitution of the United States. He was 
somewhat afraid of setting up a strong central government, for 
as he often said, " A wrong step made now will plunge us into 
misery, and our republic will be lost." He died in Charlotte 
County, Virginia, in the same year as Washington, 1799. 

Liberty or Death 

The text is taken from The Life, Correspondence, and 
Speeches of Patrick Henry, by William Wirt Henry, New York, 
1891, vol. I, p. 262. Moses Coit Tyler says of the version of 
the speech here followed, that it certainly gives the substance 
of Henry's argument and is " probably more authentic than are 
most of the famous speeches attributed to public characters be- 



246 LIVES AND NOTES 

fore reporters' galleries were opened and before the art of re- 
porting was brought to its present perfection." 

1 That insidious smile. A rumor was current that nearly all 
that the Continental Congress had asked for in its petition to 
the King on September i, 1774, was about to be granted. 
Henry's distrust of this report was justified, for the rumor 
proved to be unfounded. 

DANIEL WEBSTER 

Daniel Webster was born at Salisbury, New Hampshire, In 
1782 of extremely poor parents. In spite of his poverty, his 
father was resolved that the boy should be well educated. Al- 
though hindered by many obstacles, Daniel was finally gradu- 
ated from Dartmouth in 1801. After a brief experience at 
teaching he entered law and long stood at the head of his pro- 
fession. 

In 1819 occurred his first great legal battle, the celebrated 
Dartmouth College case, in which the corporation was first 
recognized as a legal entity. But it is really as a persuasive 
orator that he achieved his greatest fame. In December, 1820, 
he delivered an oration at the two hundredth anniversary of 
the founding of Plymouth Colony. In June, 1825, came the 
famous address at Bunker Hill. The following year he spoke at 
Fanueil Hall on Adams and Jefferson. 

Webster represented Portsmouth, N. H. in the House of 
Representatives from 1813 to 1827, when he was elected United 
States senator from Massachusetts. In 1830, his Reply to 
Hayne placed him at once in a foremost position among Ameri- 
can statesmen and marked the climax of his political career. 
In 1839, he became secretary of state to President Harrison, 
and continued in office under President Tyler. In 1842 he 
negotiated with Lord Ashburton a treaty establishing the 
boundary line between the United States and Canada. For a 
few years he enjoyed private life, but in 1845 was sent again ! 
to the Senate, and was there active during the Mexican War. j 
His support of the Compromise of 1850 " in all its points" in- 
eluding the Fugitive Slave Law did much to lessen his popu- j 
larity and dim his fame. When Fillmore became president \ 
Webster again became secretary of state, and occupied that j 
position until he died, October 24, 1852. 



LIVES AND NOTES 247 



First Bunker IIii.l Address 

The text is slightly abridged from vol. I, p. 59 of The 
Works of Daniel Webster, 6th ed., Boston, 1853. 

1 Ancient colony. This description would apply to Virginia, 
New York and other colonies. 

2 Society whose organ I am. The Bunker Hill Monument 
Association was founded in 1823. Daniel Webster was its sec- 
ond president. 

3 The foundation of that monument. Seventeen years later 
the granite obelisk, 221 feet in height, was completed. 

4 Venerable men. Two hundred veterans of the Revolution- 
ary War were present; forty of them had taken part in the 
battle of Bunker Hill. 

5 One who now hears me. The Marquis de Lafayette came 
to the United States in 1777 and was given a commission as 
major-general He took part in several battles and was once 
wounded. When he returned to America in 1825 as the nation's 
guest, he was given a triumphal progress wherever he went. 

°Serus in coelum redeas. May it be long before you return 
to heaven. 

7 " I am the state." This is the French expression of the Eng- 
lish principle of the Divine Right of Kings. 

8 Struggle of the Greeks: the Greek war with the Turks for 
independence. 

Webster's Reply to Hayne 

The text is abridged from vol. Ill, pp. 249-349 of The Works 
of Daniel Webster, 6th ed., Boston, 1853. It was spoken origi- 
nally in connection with the debate of Foot's bill to limit the 
sale of public lands and was known extensively as Webster's 
speech on Foot's resolution. It required a day for its delivery. 

1 The honorable gentleman: Robert Y. Hayne. He was born 
in South Carolina in 1791 and became speaker of the state as- 
sembly in 1816. He refused the attorney-generalship of the 
United States to become the attorney-general of South Carolina. 
In 1822 he was elected to the United States Senate, where he 
frequently presented with eloquence the views of Calhoun who 
was vice-president. He afterward became governor of South 
Carolina and died in 1840. 

2 Hearty concurrence. Webster's generosity and his love for 
the Union as a whole, leaves no doubt that this is his sincere 



248 LIVES AND NOTES 

opinion. As a debater, nevertheless, he was accustomed to dif- 
fer with his opponents on as few matters as possible and to try 
to turn the ideas that they persented most elaborately into argu- 
ments for his own side. 

3 Honored name. Hayne's grandfather was a famous Revo- 
lutionary patriot. This generous reference to the ancestry of 
his opponent, went far to disarm criticism and to secure for 
Webster a sympathetic hearing. 

4 The people's constitution. On the morning of this debate 
a friend of Webster's said, "It is a critical moment; and it is 
time, it is high time that the people of this country should know 
what this Constitution is." " Then," replied Mr. Webster, " by 
the blessing of heaven they shall learn this day before the sun | 
goes down what I understand it to be." Webster held that 
the will of the people exercised through the Federal govern- 
ment is supreme and of necessity the states must submit. 

The emphasis secured by his recurring use of the word 
1 people ' in this paragraph, reminds one of the similar use of the 
word in Lincoln's Gettysburg speech. 

ABRAHAM LINCOLN 

Abraham Lincoln, the sixteenth president of the United States, 
was born in Harden County, Kentucky, February 12, 1809. In 
spite of the limitations and hardships of his early life, he edu- 
cated himself by reading and diligent study. In 1834, ne was 
elected to the legislature of Illinois, and three years later was 
admitted to the bar. In 1846 he was elected to Congress, and 
in 1858 was defeated for the United States Senate by Stephen 
A. Douglas. Two years later he became president, and entered 
upon an administration of unparalleled greatness and perma- 
nent service. Perhaps no other presidential term has been 
chronicled with so much detail and painstaking research; and 
certainly no public career was ever more worthy of compre- 
hensive study. On April 14, 1865, bis life was suddenly ended 
by the assassin's bullet. 

" He lived," said Joseph H. Choate, " to see his proclama- 
tion of emancipation embodied in an amendment to the Consti- 
tution. It was given to him to witness the surrender of the 
Rebel Army and the fall of their capitol, and the starry flag 
that he loved waving in triumph over the national soil. When 
he died by the madman's hand in the supreme hour of victory 
the vanquished lost their best friend, and the human race one 



LIVES AND NOT! - 249 

of its noblest examples, and all the friends of freedom and 
justice, in whose cause he lived and died, joined hands as 
mourners at his grave." 

Lincoln's Address at Cooper Institute 

The text is abridged from Address of Abraham Lincoln Issued 
by the Young Men's Republican Club, New York, i860. 

1 The Constitution of the United States. The constitutional 
convention met in Independence Hall in Philadelphia, on May 
2 5> 1787. There were fifty-five delegates chosen from among 
the most distinguished men in America. After Washington had 
been elected chairman, the convention debated in secret for 
nearly four months. When the work was completed, thirty- 
nine of the forty-two delegates then present signed the docu- 
ment. Its success is largely due to the fact that it was founded, 
not on theory, but on approved precedent existing in the Eng- 
lish Constitution or in the organization of the American states. 
It is unequalled by any work of its kind produced during the 
history of the world. 

2 Corporal oath: a solemn oath, originally so named from 
laying the hand on some sacred object, as the corporal-cloth of 
the altar. 

3 John Brozin was a fanatic who had been spurred on to vio- 
lence by his experiences in Kansas in 1854 during the struggle 
for control by the slavery and anti-slavery factions. After 
seizing the arsenal at Harper's Ferry, Va., he ' emancipated ' the 
slaves in that vicinity. He was soon overpowered, tried for 
treason, and hanged. Although Brown's action was not justi- 
fied by the abolitionists, the incident greatly increased the 
growing ill-will between the South and the North. 

4 Orsini's attempt on Louis Napoleon. About two years be- 
fore the delivery of this speech, Felice Orsini, an Italian pa- 
triot, attempted to assassinate Napoleon III. The English 
people were suspected by the French of being in sympathy with 
the plot. 

5 Helper's book: The Impending Crisis of the South, by Hin- 
ton Rowan Helper, of North Carolina, was published in 1857 
and had an extensive sale. It was a severe criticism of slavery. 

EDWARD D. BAKER 

Edward Dickinson Baker was born in London, England, 
February 24, 1811. In 1815 his father moved to Philadelphia, 



250 LIVES AND NOTES 

and ten years later to Illinois. He followed his father's trade 
as weaver for a while, and then took up the study of law. He 
was admitted to the bar at Springfield, and in 1837 was sent to 
the state legislature. In 1840 he was made state senator, and 
four years later representative to Congress. He resigned his 
seat in 184.6 to take active part in the Mexican War in which 
he distinguished himself at the siege of Vera Cruz and at Cerro 
Gordo. From 1849 to 1851 he again served in Congress. In the 
latter year he went to California to practice law. In i860 he 
was elected United States senator from Oregon. At the out- 
break of the Civil War he became colonel of a volunteer regi- 
ment, and at the battle of Ball's Bluff on October 21, 1861, he 
was killed in action. 

Breckenridge-Baker Debate on the War 

The text is abridged from The Congressional Globe, 37th 
Congress, First Session, pp. 376-380. 

1 Does not the world know it? When all is in doubt and the 
future dark, such asseveration seems unanswerable. At such 
times it needs a brave man to make a courageous reply. 

2 In favor of peace, etc. Bereavement, hunger, expense, as 
noted by Breckenridge, are the inevitable accompaniments of 
war, but are not arguments concerning the justice of the dis- 
pute or its necessity. Did the use of these ideas help Brecken- 
ridge to accomplish his purpose? 

3 A sneer of incredulity. This is an interesting snapshot 
of the faces of his andience. 

4 The Senator from Vermont. Senator Collamer had opposed 
the bill because he believed that the commanding general ought 
to be left utterly free to conduct military affairs without any 
regulation on the part of Congress. 

5 Capitol of the Confederacy. In Twenty Years in Con- 
gress, vol. I, p. 344, Blaine says, " Breckenridge made a speech 
of which it is a fair criticism to say that it reflected in all 
respects the views held by the Confederate Congress then in 
session in Richmond." 

6 Knowing their value well. Logical argument cannot cope 
with the emotional and persuasive force of words such as these. 

JOHN BRIGHT 

John Bright was born in Greenbank, Rochedale, England in 
1811. Unlike most celebrated orators he had little education 



LIVES AND NOTES 251 

other than that gained by experience, for at the age of fifteen 
he started his business career in his father's factory. In 1832 
he championed the Liberal cause in the reform movement and 
seven years later attained prominence as a member of the 
Anti-Corn Law League. In this campaign he became the 
close friend and associate of Richard Cobden, the inspiring 
genius of the Free Trade movement. In 1843 Bright was 
elected to Parliament and immediately advocated the extension 
of free trade. During the War of the Crimea, Bright opposed 
the government in its course, and as a result was defeated in the 
city of Manchester in 1857. He immediately found ardent sup- 
porters in Birmingham and was returned to Parliament as 
representative of that city. During the American Civil War 
he defended the cause of the North and was largely responsible 
for the fact that England did not, like France recognize the 
independence of the Confederacy. In 1882 he resigned his seat 
in the cabinet because of lack of agreement with Mr. Gladstone, 
the prime minister, in regard to the bombardment of Alexan- 
dria. The remaining years of his life were spent in com- 
parative retirement, and in 1889 he died. 

The Trent Affair 

The text is abridged from p. 167 of vol I of Speeches on 
Questions of Public Policy, by John Bright, 2 vols., London, 
1868. 

1 All up in arms. When the news of the capture of the com- 
missioners reached England, a great outburst of anger over- 
spread the kingdom and the government began making prepa- 
rations for war. Great quantities of munitions were shipped to 
Canada. Thirty thousand soldiers were put on board ship with 
the understanding that they were to go to Charlestown to join 
the Confederates. In reality they were sent to Halifax. 

2 // all other tongues are silent. With such statements 
Bright was able to secure sympathy for his position and to 
dull the criticism that his views were not representative. 

John Lothrop Motley, the historian, wrote to Bright as fol- 
lows: "When I first read your speech at Rochdale, I wished 
to write and thank you for it at once. But I found myself too 
agitated to do so. I laid it aside for two days, and I have 
just now read it all through again. I should perhaps have been 
inclined to dwell more, in writing to you, upon the breadth 
and accuracy of view, the thorough grasp of the subject and 



252 LIVES AND NOTES 

the lucid flow of argument by which your speech was char- 
acterized; but the peculiar circumstances under which it was 
delivered make it impossible for me to express my emotions in 
any other way than in one grand burst of gratitude to the 
speaker. Thank God! our noble mother tongue is not entirely 
given over to revilings and denunciations of those who speak 
it beyond the sea And I honor you more than I can tell, 
for your courage in thus standing up, in the midst of the tem- 
pest of unreasoning wrath now sweeping over England, to 
defend not an unpopular but apparently a hated cause." 

HENRY WARD BEECHER 

Henry Ward Beecher was born in Litchfield, Connecticut, 
June 24, 1813. In 1834 ne was graduated from Amherst Col- 
lege, and three years later from the Lane Theological Seminary 
in Cincinnati, Ohio, of which his father Lyman Beecher, was 
president. He entered the ministry as pastor of a church at 
Lawrenceberg, Indiana, and later removed to Indianapolis. In 
1847, ne became pastor of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, which 
under his leadership became, next to Old South Church, Boston, 
the historic church of America. 

During the Civil War Mr. Beecher was an ardent abolitionist 
and Unionist. In 1863 he travelled in England on behalf of the 
North, and delivered five memorable addresses. Although he 
met with opposition during the delivery of the first three of his 
addresses, the reception given to the fourth was by far the 
stormiest. Placards denouncing him had been generously dis- 
tributed in Liverpool where he was to speak, and at least half 
the audience were opposed to his views. By means of this 
speech, however, he succeeded in changing the sentiments of 
almost all England even though he failed to win the particular 
audience. Consequently when he appeared in London, October 
20, 1863, Exeter Hall was so crowded he could hardly enter. 
Instead of opposition he met with sympathy. During the four 
days since his speech at Liverpool, England had experienced a 
great change of heart. British sentiment now favored him, and 
his last address at London was little short of a triumph. The 
persuasive power of his speeches has probably never been ex- 
celled. Certainly few men ever by their words accomplished 
more for their country. 

In addition to his work as preacher and orator, he was for 
years the editor of The Christian Union and The New York 



LIVES AND NOTKS 253 

Independent. In 1886 he again travelled in England, and was 
royally entertained as the ambassador from the hearts of 
a friendly people. On March 8, 1887, he died. 

Beecher's Speech at Liverpool 

The text is abridged from p. 515 of Patriotic Addresses in 
America and England, by Henry Ward Beecher, Ed. John R. 
Howard, New York, 1887. 

Mason and Dixon's line: a line determining the boundary of 
Maryland, located in 1763 by two surveyors from whom it was 
named. It later marked the division between the free and the 
slave states. 

2 Morrill tariff. This tariff, passed in 1861, greatly increased 
duties. In order to produce funds for war, its rates were raised 
twice in one year. Its provisions were extremely distasteful to 
manufacturing interests in England. Even Bright called it, " the 
monstrous and absurd tariff." 

3 Recent doctrine of neutrality. The position of neutrality 
which England had assumed was defended on the ground that 
foreign powers could not respect the Federal blockade of the 
Southern ports without recognizing that a state of war between 
two sovereign states existed. In 1831, however, Russia had 
blockaded her own ports held by Circassian rebels and Eng- 
land did not acknowledge the belligerent rights of the rebels. 

4 Lord Russell. Lord John Russell, the foreign secretary, 
used his influence consistently in favor of the cause of the 
North. While the official government of England did little in a 
direct way to aid the North, it did much indirectly. Although 
there were Englishmen, like Lord Palmerston, who espoused the 
cause of the Confederacy, there were in every English town 
men who, like John Bright, used every means at their command 
throughout the war to help America free the slaves and pre- 
serve the Union. 

5 Against a storm. Every orator who attempts to influence 
an audience encounters opposition which, even if not apparent, 
seeks to make his words ineffective. Seldom, indeed, is opposi- 
tion as tangible and evident as that which Beecher met while 
delivering this speech. 

6 Strive with my voice. The speech with interruptions had 
occupied three hours. 



254 LIVES AND NOTES 



ABRAHAM LINCOLN 

Speech at the Dedication of the National Cemetery at 
Gettysburg 

The text here used is that made by Lincoln for the Soldiers 
and Sailors' Fair at Baltimore in 1864. It can be found in a 
pamphlet known as The Address of the Hon. Edward Everett 
at the National Cemetery of Gettysburg, November iq, 1863, 
with the dedicatory Speech of President Lincoln and Other 
Exercises of the Occasion, Little, Brown, and Co., Boston, 1864. 

1 A great battle -fie Id. Every year thousands of American 
citizens make a pilgrimage to the spot, now marked with a 
bronze memorial, where this address was first delivered. Near 
the cemetery on the battle ground is a national park of unique 
interest. 

Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address 

The text is taken from The Complete Works of Abraham 
Lincoln, vol. II, p. 656, New York, 1894. 

This speech was delivered but six weeks before Lincoln's 
death; but in one sense these weeks were the best of his life. 
His Second Inaugural address had confirmed the reputation that 
had come with the Gettysburg speech. It was called the great- 
est state paper of the century. Scholars and critics in Europe 
and America testified that the former backwoodsman had be- 
come one of the foremost writers of English in the world. He 
was hailed everywhere as chief among patriots and states- 
men. His high hopes for the future were also realized. On 
April 1 Sherman defeated the Confederates at Five Forks. 
The next day Grant won at Petersburg; and the day followingi 
Richmond fell. On April 9 Lee surrendered at Appomattox 
and the Confederacy was beaten. 

As Lincoln's funeral train in the latter part of April passed 
through the chief cities of the East on its progress toward 
Springfield, banners were hung in every town bearing the words 
with which Lincoln began the last paragraph of this speech — 
" With malice for none, with charity for all." 

HENRY W. GRADY 

Henry Woodfin Grady was born at Athens, Georgia, May 
24, 1850. After completing his education at the universities of 
Georgia and Virginia, he entered upon his life work, journalism. 



LIVES AND NOTES 255 

After serving for several years as a correspondent and editor of 
several papers, he became part owner and editor of The 
Atlanta Constitution. In 1886 at the annual dinner of the 
New England Society in New York City, he delivered his 
address called The New South. The next morning, his speech 
occupied the chief place in the newspapers, and parts of it 
were reprinted all over the country. This sudden fame en- 
couraged Grady to make many other addresses on similar 
topics. In this dual capacity of speaker and editor, he used 
his influence to eradicate the last traces of prejudice that lin- 
gered between the North and the South as a result of the Civil 
War. He died December 23, 1889. 

The New South 

The text in full is found at page 7 of The Complete Ora- 
tions and Speeches of Henry W. Grady, edited by Edwin D. 
Shurter, no date, Norwood. The version used here follows in 
most respects that used in Select Orations, ed. A. M. Hall, New 
York, 1911. 

1 Benjamin H. Hill. Benjamin Harvey Hill was born in 
1823 and died in 1882. In 1861, in the Georgia state convention 
to discuss secession, he spoke with great power in favor of 
Georgia's remaining in the Union. Nevertheless he went with 
his friends into the Confederate army. After the war was 
over he was imprisoned for at time at Fort Lafayette in New 
York harbor. Later he became a patriotic and useful member 
of the United States Senate. 

2 Tammany Hall is located at 145 East Fourteenth street, 
New York City. It is the meeting place of the Tammany so- 
ciety, an important organization in the Democratic party. 

3 Dr. Talmage. Rev. T. De Witt Talmage, D.D., was famous 
as lecturer and as pastor of the Brooklyn Tabernacle Presby- 
terian Church. His somewhat sensational sermons were widely 
published. 

4 Ashes left us in 1864. Atlanta at the beginning of the Civil 
War was strongly fortified by the Confederates and was de- 
fended first by General Johnston and then by General Hood. 
It was captured by Sherman in September, 1864, and as a con- 
sequence of military operations was nearly destroyed by fire. 

5 The South has nothing to take back. One might well con- 
sider it difficult to induce a Northern audience in 1886 to accept 
that view. Through what logic or new evidence could the 



256 LIVES AND NOTES 

speaker hope to reconcile the conflicting opinions of the North 
and the South? Grady's statement might well be considered 
the opening sally in a fierce dispute and better suited to arouse 
enmity than to win reconciliation. Such would have been the 
case had the orator proceeded to debate the justice of his 
cause. He was content, however, to lay argument aside and to 
rely on persuasion. When he referred to sentiments universal 
among men and wakened in his audience a common love for 
country, home, and family, he and his hearers met on ground 
where there was no difference of opinion, and the irreconcilable 
conflict was forgotten. 

Q A name dear to me. The father of the speaker, Colonel 
Grady, was born in North Carolina but became a prominent 
business man in Athens, Georgia. He entered the Confederate 
army and was killed while leading his regiment in a charge at 
Petersburg. 

THEODORE ROOSEVELT 

Theodore Roosevelt, the twenty-fifth president of the United 
States, was born in New York City in 1858. Shortly after his 
graduation from Harvard University, he became a member of 
the New York state legislature. He subsequently held several 
important public offices, including that of police commissioner 
of New York City, and member of the United States Civil 
Service Commission. In 1898 he resigned as assistant secretary 
of the navy to organize a volunteer cavalry regiment which 
later became famous as the " Rough Riders." At the conclu- 
sion of the Spanish American War, he was elected governor of 
New York State, and in 1900 was elected vice-president of the 
United States. In September, 1901, at the death of President 
William McKinley, Roosevelt became president; and in 1904 
by vote of the people was returned to the same office. In 1912 
he broke away from the Republican party and ran for the 
presidency on the Progressive ticket, but was defeated by 
Woodrow Wilson. He subsequently engaged in literary work 
and took an active part in public affairs. At the beginning 
of the war he espoused the side of the allies; and when the 
United States entered the contest, offered to raise and equip a 
regiment. He died suddenly on January 6, 1919. 

History will credit to the public life of Theodore Roosevelt 
the aid he gave to downtrodden wage-earners, his advocacy 
of military preparedness, and his ideal that with men and na- 



LIVES AND NOTES 257 

tions expanded influence implies enlarged duty. As a private 
citizen he will be remembered for his joy in living, his cheer- 
ful optimism, the gentleness of his family life, and the warmth 
of his friendship. The breadth of his sympathy is shown in 
the fact that during his presidency the White House was the 
resort alike of philosophers and theologians, and of prize- 
fighters and Rough Riders. He preferred to win through con- 
test rather than compromise. His adherence to the side of 
justice and his moral and physical courage were never in 
doubt. His political opponents commended his sincerity and 
manliness. Before his death he was known both at home and 
abroad as " America's first citizen." 



The Strenuous Life 

The text is abridged from The Strenuous Life, The Century 
Company, New York, 1902. 

Observe the means taken by the speaker in the first two 
paragraphs to secure the benevolent attention of his audience. 

1 Our army needs complete reorganization. It is said that we 
won the war with Spain not because of our military efficiency, 
but because decrepit Spain was poorer than we. Many of the 
principal officers of our army not only had had no experience 
in the field with large bodies of men but were also physically 
unable to endure the hardships of a campaign. Late in Roose- 
velt's last term as president he directed that each army officer 
should prove his ability to walk fifty miles in three days or 
ride one hundred. As his order was bitterly opposed by the 
army and by the press, the President gave an illustration of 
the strenuous life by riding on horseback over one hundred 
miles in a single day. 

2 Ignoble peace. In his Autobiography Roosevelt says there 
are men who put peace ahead of righteousness and " who seek 
to make the United States impotent for international good 
under the pretense of making us impotent for international evil. 
All the men of this kind, and all the organizations they have 
controlled, since we began our career as a nation, all put to- 
gether, have not accomplished one hundredth part as much for 
both peace and righteousness, have not done one hundredth 
part as much either for ourselves or for other peoples, as was 
accomplished by the people of the United States when they 
fought the war with Spain, and with resolute good faith and 



258 LIVES AND NOTES 

commonsense worked out the solution of the problems which 
sprang from the war." 

3 The domination of the world. While President Roosevelt 
may not have had the German nation definitely in mind, it is 
true that it was even then using every means to extend its em- 
pire and was very jealous of the expansion of other powers. 

HERBERT HENRY ASQUITH 

The Right Honorable Herbert Henry Asquith was born at 
Morley, Yorkshire, England, September 12, 1852. He was edu- 
cated at the City of London School and Balliol College, Oxford. 
In 1886 he was elected member of Parliament for East Fife and 
holds that office to this day. In 1892 he was appointed secre- 
tary of state for the Home Department and ecclesiastical com- 
missioner. He held both these offices for three years. From 
1905 to 1908 he was chancellor of the exchequer, and in the 
latter year became First Lord of the Treasury and prime min- 
ister. When war was declared he heroically took the respon- 
sibility for its management on his own shoulders by becoming 
secretary of state for war. Although he subsequently gave way 
to David Lloyd-George he was generally recognized by his 
friends and opponents alike as a stalwart supporter of the war 
and as one of the master leaders in the United Kingdom. 

The Call to Arms 

The text is found in The New York Times Current History 
of the European War, vol. I, No. 2, pp. 309-313. It has been 
slightly abbreviated. 

One cannot but admire the spirit that animates this speech 
when one remembers that it was spoken before the Germans 
were checked in the battle of the Marne. 

1 Eirencon. A measure for securing peace. The proposed 
arbitration treaties were at that time under discussion. The 
treaty between Great Britain and the United States was as- 
sured but not finally revised, approved, and signed by both 
nations until October 8, 1914. It provided that matter in dis- 
pute between the two nations must be referred to an interna- 
tional commission for investigation. It also bound each nation 
not to enter upon hostilities before receiving a report from the 
commission. Similar treaties were made by the United States 
with nearly all other civilized powers except Germany which 
declined to be so bound. 



LIVES AND NOTES 259 

'-' Thi sack of Louvain. At Louvaio in addition to the out- 
- that marked the progress of the Germans through Belgium, 

they destroyed the beautiful cathedral and burned the library 
with its priceless manuscripts. 

3 Sir Edward Grey, For an account of what Lord Grey, sec- 
retary of foreign relations, had accomplished for the world's 
peace before the beginning of the Great War, see Europe's 
.1 blest Diplomat, an article in Harpers W eekly for May 3, 1913. 
In 1914 when Austria delivered her ultimatum to Servia, Grey 
at once sought to have the difference submitted to arbitration. 
On July 27 he proposed that France, Italy, Germany, and 
Russia meet in London in conference. Germany declined. He 
then proposed that Austria and Russia confer; and Austria 
declined. He next suggested that Austria occupy Belgrade and 
the neighboring territory as a pledge for a satisfactory settle- 
ment on the part of the powers. On July 29 he announced that 
as far as England was concerned, mediation was ready to come 
into operation by any method that Germany thought possible. 

4 Who do not mean to separate. On the very day that this 
speech w r as delivered England, France, and Russia, signed a 
treaty binding each not to conclude a separate peace. 

5 The children of the empire. The relations between the 
colonies and the Mother Country may well be contrasted with 
that existing during the premiership of Lord North, minister of 
George III to whom clung German traditions. The filial 
response of the children of the empire far surpassed Edmund 
Burke's most hopeful dreams. 

G Mobilization was ordered. Only a month had passed since 
war was declared, but the response to the call for volunteers 
had been such as to upset all the German calculations and to 
make a victory at the Marne a possibility. 

' Absolutely assured of reinstatement. Such expressions indi- 
cate how little statesmen realized the possible extent and dura- 
tion of the war. 



WOODROW WILSON 

Woodrow Wilson was born at Staunton, Virginia, on Decem- 
ber 28, 1856. His early life was spent in the South. In 1879 
he was graduated from Princeton College, and two year< later 
graduated in law from the University of Virginia. Af'er a 
brief experience in law he studied at Johns Hopkins CJnive 



a6o LIVES AND NOTES 

His thesis for the doctorate, Congressional Government, was his 
first important writing. 

In 1890 he became professor of history at Princeton, and in 
1902 was made president of the university. In 1910 he was 
elected governor of New Jersey — the first Democrat to hold that 
office in sixteen years. In 1912, he was chosen for the presidency 
of the United States, and in 1916 was re-elected. On each occa- 
sion he filled the high office with distinction. Besides his rare 
insight as statesman, President Wilson has unusual ability as 
a master of prose style. In these days of almost countless 
political documents of world-wide importance, the pronounce- 
ments of the President are generally accorded first place, both 
for their form and for their sober wisdom. 

Message to Congress, April 2, 1917 

The text is taken from How the War Came to America, a 
pamphlet issued by the Committee on Public Information, 
Washington, 1918. 

1 Extraordinary session. The session was extraordinary in 
the sense that it was a special session. The regular session met 
the first Monday in December. 

2 Constitutionally permissible. The president cannot declare 
war as the Constitution specifically gives that power to Con- 
gress. 

3 Its promise then given us. The President refers to the 
pledge given in answer to our protests at the sinking_ of the 
Sussex that in the future Germany would not sink merchant ves- 
sels without warning and an opportunity for those on board to 
escape. Germany's attempt to avoid responsibility for this 
pledge by making it contingent on Great Britain's not continu- 
ing the blockade was thwarted by President Wilson's note of 
May 8, 191 6, in which he stated that the United States could 
not consider the promise in any way contingent on the actions of 
any other country; and as Germany made no reply, consent was 
understood in accordance with the usages of international law. 

4 Ships have been sunk. Eight American ships had been 
sunk in the previous two months. Two hundred and twenty- 
six Americans had lost their lives, one hundred and fourteen 
of whom perished in the sinking of th^ Lusitania. 

5 Make very clear to all the world vjhat our motives and our 
objects are. This President Wilson was most successful in 
accomplishing. Cardinal Mercier, on Memorial Day, 1919, well 



LIVES AND NOTES 261 

expressed the common understanding of America's aim. 
" Glorious America went into the war, unurged by any politi- 
cal or material interests; without any idea of territorial con- 
quest or vengeance, and gave the world a magnificent proof 
of strength and energy. With an improvised army, attaining 
immediately to the perfection of those created by traditions of 
discipline, military science, and strategy. 

" In days gone by, knights would bring swords before the 
altar and beg God's blessing. The Pontiff would answer their 
call, saying, 'If I die here, never wound man unjustly; de- 
fend all that is right and .all that is true.' Then the knight, 
three times brandishing his naked sword, and the Pontiff giving 
him the kiss of peace would say, ' Peace be with you.' 

11 Three times within little more than a century have the 
sons of the Great Republic drawn sword from the sheath for 
liberty. Three times also it has given them victory. In 1776, 
George Washington with the help of Lafayette, conquered for 
Independence. In 1865, Abraham Lincoln drew asunder the 
chains of slavery. On the second of April, 1917, your Presi- 
dent called forth the members of Congress and spoke those im- 
portant words that right is more precious than peace." 

6 The old, unhappy days. Wordsworth says the solitary 
reaper sang a ballad on 

" old, unhappy, far-off things, 

And battles long ago.. ,, 

7 The intercepted note. He refers to the Zimmerman note of 
January 19, 1917, in which Mexico was notified of the com- 
ing of unrestricted submarine warfare and was offered an 
alliance with Germany. Mexico was to attempt to secure the 
aid of Japan and was to invade the United States in the hope of 
conquering Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. Germany was to 
assist the operations financially. The American Pro-German 
press immediately branded the note as a forgery, but Germany 
not only acknowledged the genuineness of the note but de- 
fended it. 

8 She can do no other. President Wilson closes his address 
with an adaptation of a German sentiment that has come down 
from better days. The reference is to the closing words of 
Martin Luther's eloquent refusal to retract before the Diet of 
Worms, " Here stand I. God helping me I can do no other.'* 



262 LIVES AND NOTES 



DAVID LLOYD-GEORGE 

The Right Honorable David Lloyd-George was born at Man- 
chester, England, in 1863. After completing his studies at the 
Llanystymdwy Church School he became in 1884 a solicitor. In 
1905 he became president of the Board of Trade; and, during 
the three years he held that office, distinguished himself for 
executive ability and breadth of vision. In 1908 he succeeded 
Mr. Asquith as chancellor of the exchequer, and in 1916 when 
the Liberal ministry came into power he succeeded Asquith as 
prime minister. Although beset by many perplexing problems 
Lloyd-George maintained his ministry through his tact in 
carrying on the government and his success in waging a victori- 
ous war. 

The Meaning of America's Entrance into the War 

The text is taken slightly abbreviated from The New York 
Times of April 13, 1917. 

1 Monarchical swashbucklers. A swashbuckler is a bully; or 
a swaggering, boasting fellow. 

2 Three wars all of conquest. Germany fought in 1864 with 
Denmark; in 1866, with Austria; and in 1870, with France. 

3 That victory on Monday. On Monday, April 9, 1917, oc- 
curred the battle of Vimy Ridge. 

WOODROW WILSON 

The Flag Day Speech 

The text is taken from How the War Came to America, a 
pamphlet issued by the Committee on Public Information, Wash- 
ington, 191 8. 

1 Flag Day. The flag of the United States was formally 
adopted by Congress on June 14, 1777. The governor of New 
York State in 1897 first officially recommended the celebration 
of the anniversary as an incentive to patriotism. The day is 
now observed throughout the nation. 

2 // has no other character than what we give it. The form 
of this statement was probably influenced by Secretary of the 
Interior Franklin K. Lane's speech on The Makers of the Flag, 
The following sentences in which the flag is represented as 
speaking, are quoted from the speech, " I am whatever you 



LIVES AND NOTES 263 

make me, nothing more. I am your belief in yourself, your 
dream of what a people may become. I am the day's work of 
the weakest man and the largest dream of the most daring. I 
am the Constitution and the courts, statutes and the statute- 
makers, soldier and dreadnaught, drayman and street sweep, 
cook, counselor, and clerk. I am what you make me, nothing 
more." 

3 The German government itself here in our own Capital. 
Count J. H. von Bernstoff, the German ambassador to the United 
States, with the help of Dr. Bernhard Dernberg, directed Ger- 
man propaganda in America. Bernstoff was connected with the 
Zimmerman note. On January 22, 1917, he asked the German 
foreign office for $50,000, with which to try to influence Congress, 
and he was in communication with agents who undertook 
sabotage. Dr. Constantin Dumba, the Austrian ambassador to 
the United States, was vigorously engaged in fomenting labor 
troubles. His activity in this direction was first definitely 
established through one of his letters that fell into British hands. 

4 The guns of German warships. At the beginning of the 
war the German cruisers, the Goeben and the Breslau, took 
refuge in the Dardanelles. Instead of interning these ships in 
accordance with international law, the Turkish government — 
then ostensibly neutral — pretended to buy them. 

5 Our ancient tradition of isolation. This marks an advance 
into participation in world politics beyond even that advocated 
by President Roosevelt at the time of the Spanish-American 
War. 

OTTO H. KAHN 

Otto H. Kahn was born in Mannheim, Germany, February 
21, 1867. His early life was spent in that city and there he 
received a college education and was enrolled for one year in 
the German army. After learning banking in Germany, he 
spent five years in London in a branch of the Deutsche Bank. 
In August, 1893, he came to America and took up his residence 
in New York where he became identified with American social 
and commercial life. Although perhaps best known as a mem- 
ber of Kuhn, Loeb, & Company and as a director of several 
trust and railroad corporations, he has nevertheless generously 
devoted himself to the promotion of numerous artistic and 
literary movements. In the field of music he has served his fel- 
low citizens as chairman of the Metropolitan and Century 



264 LIVES AND NOTES 

Opera companies, and has assisted several other musical or- 
ganizations both in America and in England. His pen and 
voice have constantly championed the cause of democracy and 
social and political reform. He has looked to education to help 
solve many of the social problems of the day and has always 
been a generous supporter of such work. When the great 
problem of the world war presented itself to the American 
people, German born though he was, Mr. Kahn immediately 
took the side of justice and democracy against Prussian domi- 
nation. His first hand knowledge of German conditions and his 
thorough-going Americanism enabled him to perform a unique 
service in mobilizing the loyalty of American citizens of Ger- 
man birth. 

Prussianized Germany 

The text is taken from pp. 77-87, Right above Race, New 
York, 1918. 

President Wilson has said: "I would not be afraid upon the 
test of ' America first ' to take a census of all the foreign born 
citizens of the United States, for I know that the majority of 
them came here because they believed in America; and their 
belief in America made them better citizens than some peo- 
ple who were born in America. ... I am not deceived as to 
the balance of opinion among the foreign born citizens of the 
United States, but I am in a hurry for an opportunity to have a 
line-up and let the men who are thinking first of other countries 
stand on one side, and all those that are for America, first, last, 
and all the time, on the other side." 

1 The only road. The German people were led astray 
through the substitution of propaganda for education; a re- 
turn to their former happy condition could be effected only 
through revolution. 

2 Only one course. In Where Do You Stand? a book ad- 
dressed to German-Americans, Herman Hagedorn writes as 
follows. " Where do you stand ? The question has been put to 
nations and to men again and again since that tragic day in 
1914 when the Great War began. Turkey and Bulgaria an- 
swered it in one way; Servia and Belgium, in another. 

" We Americans of German origin stand at the cross-roads. 
If we step forth now, without hesitation, and without reserve 
for America and her cause, we will be regarded henceforth as 
Americans and nothing but Americans, loved and respected 



LIVES AND NOTES 263 

more possibly than anv other element in our population, because 
we have been put to the greatest test of all and have proved 
faithful to the Republic. 

44 I appeal to you because I am one of you. I have been torn 
as you are torn. I love German men and women and German 
forests and hills and songs as you love them. I too have a 
father in Germany; I too had a German mother; and I too 
have brothers fighting in Germany's armies. For a time my 
reason as well as my heart was with Germany's cause, and even 
after my reason would no longer let me hope for Germany's 
triumph, for a time my heart was still rebelliously thrilled at 
the news of a German victory. 

" And I say to you most solemnly, the time has come for us 
all who are of German origin to stand forth and individually 
and collectively, publicly declare ourselves. 

" I am against Germany. I wish to see my country victori- 
ous and Germany defeated. To the fulfilment of this wish, I 
pledge my hands, my heart, and my spirit." 

WOODROW WILSON ' 

Message to Congress, December 4, 1917 

The text is found in Red, White and Blue Series, No. 9, issued 
by the Committee on Public Information, Washington, 1918. 

1 / hear men who debate peace. It was next to impossible for 
many intellectual Americans to conceive of the almost pre- 
historic baseness that was implied in the German aims. Ameri- 
can students of German literature, with their hearts filled with 
the beauty of German home-life and German poetry, refused 
to acknowledge Prussian guilt. American women with inter- 
national fame as promoters of reform and works of mercy were 
as little conscious of evil in German autocracy as was Cole- 
ridge's Christabel when ministering to the demon. 

2 Strut about their uneasy hour. This is an adaptation of 
Macbeth, Act V, Cc, 5, line 25. "A poor player that struts 
and frets his hour upon the stage and then is heard no more." 

3 They have a right to know. No more satisfying evidence 
concerning the democratic character of American institutions 
could be furnished than an account of the steps by which the 
American nation came to declare war and to provide the means 
of carrying it to a successful termination. Public opinion was 
supreme throughout. 



266 LIVES AND NOTES 

4 The Congress of Vienna. This congress met at Vienna in 
1815 to arrange European affairs after the downfall of Na- 
poleon. It was an imposing assembly of kings and princes that 
gathered to barter privileges and possessions without regard to 
justice and the rights of the people. 

5 A state of war with Austria-Hungary. Three days later, 
December 7, 1917, Congress followed this recommendation, and 
with only one dissenting vote, declared war on Austria. 

6 If I have overlooked anything. At this point in a passage 
omitted by the editors, the President discussed proposed legis- 
lation concerning detention camps for enemy aliens, the regula- 
tion of food prices, and the control of railways. 



President Wilson's Address at Baltimore 

The text of this speech is taken from The Brooklyn Eagle of 
April 7, 1918. 

1 This is the anniversary. Congress declared war on April 
6, 1917. 

2 The nation is awake. Unity of sentiment and unity of action 
were at last found throughout the nation. 

3 Are ready to lend to the utmost. The first Liberty Loan was 
was opened on June 15, 1917. $2,000,000,000 was offered at 
3^2 per cent and $3,035,226,850 was subscribed. The second 
loan came on October 27, 1917. The amount asked was $3,000,- 
000,000 at 4 per cent and $4,617,532,300 was subscribed. The 
loan offered on April 6, 1917, the day of this speech, was for 
$3,000,000,000 at 4*4 per cent. $4,170,019,650 was subscribed. 
The fact that seventeen million people subscribed not less than 
fifty dollars each for the third loan indicates the sense of per- 
sonal responsibility that animated the American nation in the 
second year of American participation in the Great War. 

4 The man who knows least can now see plainly. Note the 
confident, optimistic tone of the speaker. He knows that a 
united nation stands behind him. 

5 They are enjoying in Russia a cheap triumph. On December 
*5> I 9 I 7> as a result of generous promises on the part of Ger- 
many, an armistice was signed between the Central Powers and 
the Bolsheviki government of Russia at Brest-Litovsk. In the 
parley that followed Germany rapidly withdrew the reasonable 
advances that she had made at first. Not only did Germany 
refuse to evacuate Russian occupied territory, but she refused 



LIVES AND NOTES 267 

to allow the Russian people to determine their own form of 
government and political affiliations. Russia, moreover, wtfl to 
be obligated to indemnify Germany for war losses, but the 
latter would not be expected to repay Russia for damages done 
in the war. 

6 Force to the utmost. America mobilized 4,272,521 men. Of 
these over 2,000,000 were sent to France. At the time the 
armistice was signed the United States possessed the largest 
army on the western front except that of France. 



